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Decem ber 31, 1992

THURSDAY

n

Sanford Herald
S e r v in g S a n fo r d ) L a k o M a r y a n d S o m ln o la C o u n t y a ln o o 1 9 0 8

85th Year, No. 109 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□

S p o rts

SH S girls win Consi
LAKELAND — The Seminole lll|&lt;Ii School
(•Iris' basketball learn won a doubleheader In the
Polk Holiday Classic lo elalm llflli place.

See Page IB.
□

P o o p lo

Qirl Scout cookie sale to start
Everybody loves Girl Scout eooklcs which will
(•n on side Jan. H. He on the lookout for the
scouis wlio will soon be knocking on doors lo
lake orders.

Bee Page SB.

BNHMi
Holiday closings
SANFORD — Federal, stale and local govern­
ment offices will l»e closed Friday, as will banks
and mnny oilier stores.
The Sanford and Lake Mary Clly Halls are
open today but the Longwood Clly Hall will be
closed until Monday. The Seminole County
Library will close at 5 p.tn. today.
The* Seminole County Courthouse will be
closed Friday but will reopen Monday morning.
Most shopping mulls will close at t&gt; p.m. today
and many will have abbreviated hours on
Friday.

Census decision ends bid
MIAMI — When the U.S. Census Hureau
reaffirmed Its decision not to udjust Its head
count, the stule o f Florida lost out on additional
federal aid In 1993 for programs distributing
money based on population.
The undcrcount could cost Florida $12 million
to $15 million u year. Including SH million a
year In Medicaid reimbursements for health care
for the poor, according to state estimates.
For official purposes, more than 250.000
Florida residents dlsuppeured Tuesday when the
Census Bureau director Uurhuru Everltt Bryant
reaffirmed Its decision not lo adjust the 1990
census by statistically updating Its head count
for people likely to have been missed.
The decision was made despite continuing
claim s from slate und local officials that
Florida's population was undercounted in the
census, which Is taken every 10 years.
The original census said Florida had about
12.936.000 residents. Thut wus adjusted
slightly lo Just over 13 million.
By the Census Bureau's own estimate. Florida
could have 261.000 people more, including
homeless people and refugees who weren't
reached by census takers.

Doggont mail
WHEELING. W.Va. - The mull Is going lo the
dogs at Rusty Jcbbla's house.
Jebbia's terrier-sheepdog. Frisky Bob. bus
received several letters a day since hiB owners
sent away for address labels for hint. The dog's
name apparently was added lo dozens - or
mulling lists.
"It has gotten odl o f bund." said Jcbblu.
Wheeling's assistant city munuger. "N ow Frisky
Hob Ib getting mall from Ed McMahon, health
Insurance carriers, credit card companies und
lots o f so-called contests."
I

Sheriff unveils plan

C itizens to be part
of crim e prevention
By J. MARK BARFIILD
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - Seminole County
Sheriff Don Esllngcr said he wants
to bring deputies and the citizens
they protect closer together through
a series o f new programs he plans to
Implement this year.
"Crim e prevention Is a shared
responsibility," sold Esllngcr. "W e
like to put a premium on service,
but you can have a more effective,
more cost-effective, more efficient
operation If you Involve the com ­
munity."
And Esllngcr pledges to continue
changes In his department.
" T h is is just the tip o f the
Iceberg." said Esllngcr. " I have a
whole host o f other improvements I
want to put Into place In the .future.
The whole Idea Is for you and
hopefully, the rest o f the communi­

Harriett hangs
up c h ie f’s hat
By VICKI DaBORMIKR
Herald Staff Writer_______________

ty to sec an Improvement In the
services provided by the sheriff's
ofllcc."
Monday. Esllngcr unveiled a new
c o r p o r a te -s ty le d - m a n a g e m e n t
structure entailing 30 staff changes.
Included In those changes were new
com m unity-focus responsibilities
for several existing employees and
one new employee to close the
separation between the county's
primary law enforcement ngcncy
and the public It serves.
Even the titles o f many senior
officers, such as major and captain,
were abolished In favor o f "d irector"
and "deputy director." Employees
will continue to address each other
by their rank tftle. though.
Am ong the new programs arc
development o f a Police Athletic
League. Esllngcr said the PA L Is In
the beginning creation stages and

□Boo Sheriff. Page BA

FltoftMto
Form er S a n lord Police Chief
Steve Harriet! is now second In
command at the Seminole County
Sheriff's Office.

G rappling w ith
garbage, land,
sex harassm ent
By J. MARK BARFIILD

By VICKI DsBOKMIBR

Herald Staff Writer__________________
SANFORD - The past year saw
the first land purchase' under the
Natural Lands Program and the
selection o f Seminole County as the
training headquarters of a national
sports organization.
The year also saw the election o f
two new commissioners and the
start-up — and subsequent shut­
down — o f the $13 million Yankee
Lake wastewater treatment plant.
C o m m is s io n e r s an d o f f i c ia l s
grappled with borrow pits and
garbage, and came to grips with
sexual harrasment Issues.
" I like to say It was a year o f
'keeping on keeping o n '." said Bob
Sturm, chairman o f the county
commission. "W e tried to do as
much as we could with what we
had."
'
In D ecem b er, com m issio n ers
authorized the first purchase o f the
$20 million Natural Lands Program
approved by voters In 1B90. They
agreed to pay $3.3 million to buy

Herald Staff Writer

H*f«M Photo ky McharS Hapktni

One o f the ongoing projects Is the Sem inole County expressw ay.
260 acres owned by Arvlda Corp. at
the southwest com er o f Markham
Road and Markham Woods Road.
The county hopes to join with the
state In early 1993 In concluding
the $6.6 million purchase o f the

IY E A R INI
R E V IE W

SANFORD — A lumullous year
has brought many changes. * hut
lit tic* financial Improvement, lo the
Sctiiinolc County school district.
W illi the departure o f Sopt. Rob­
ert Hughes Iasi year, the lop h|kii Iii
itic (llnirlct. to I k* on appointed
position for the first time In the
district's history, wus contested for
several months. More limit 125
applicants. Including Richurd Wells,
who was serving us Interim superin­
tendent. hoped lor a chance to lead
ihc eounly school system.
A committee, comprised o f dis­
trict administrators, business and
com m u n ity leaders und repre­
sentatives o f parent und other
school groups, set mil lo find a
"visionary leader" lo 1111 the jmslllon.
Five applleauls were selected by
the committee to visit the district
und Ik - Interviewed by the board In a

Sea School, Page BA

□Bee Cevaty, Fege 2A

Airport focus:
Access road

Tee for two

ByOKOKOBDUNCAN
Herald Staff Writer__________________

.

SANFORD - W illi the Skybus
going well. Ihc main goal for the
Central Florida Regional A!r|&gt;on in
1993 Is finding ihc money lo
pay for the terminal ueeess road
ihul will conned the fuelllty with
the Orlundn International Alr|Hirl.
a c c o r d in g lo u lrp o rl d ir e c to r
Stephen Cooke.
Cooke said he hoped the funding
would be In pluee by March. 1993.
’ " I think that project Is going lo
come together. The road will allow
l&gt;coplc to travel down lo Orlundo to
the lerittlnul and buck. Passengers
can decide to go down on Skybus or
go down the roud lo Orlundo. either
wuy," he said.
After construction begins. It will
lake ulxiul u year lo complete the
roud. he said.
" I hope lo huve everything In
pluee by the end o f March. The
funding und everything else*. There
\»re still a few things we huve lo do
in Ihul area. Construction should
lake ubout u year given everything
you have in do with this kind of
project." lie said.
The roud would Incrcusc the
lni|)ortunec o f the ulrport to Sanford
und the surrounding community, he
noted.

From staff and wire roports

Florida.

Related Editorial Fags 4A

Schools faced
budget woes,
new programs

A Herald story about the stulled Lake Mury
Boulevard project Wednesday misquoted the
attorney for Seminole County.
Hob McMillan was quoted as saying the
bonding company responsible for resumption o f
the road work had selected the construction firm
that was the highest bidder. The correct quote
should read. "T h e bonding company has now
selected the lowest bidder for the pro|ccl."

Crossword.
Door Abby„
Deaths......
Dr. Oott.....

Bee Harriett, Fags 2A

1992 ends, county progress marked

Correction

CtMslfisda.

SANFORD — Steve Harriett has
dedicated Ills professional life lo
the clly o f Sanford and though he
Is moving on to work for the
county, he said Ills heart still
belongs lo Sanford.
Tomorrow. Harriett will begin a
new phase in his career as he
lakes over as the second In
c o m m a n d at th e S e m in o le
County SherlfTsOITlee.
While he said he loves Ills Job
as police chief In Sanford, he said
he Is excited about the move.
"H e (Sheriff Don Esllngcr) and I
s h a r e s o m e o f th e s o m e
philosophies on law enforce­
m ent." Harriett said. "It will bo
exciting to work with him."

•4B,BB NoroooaM «

•BA

PeU oa.
.1D,

.4A Television........
•tA

W eath er.............

Fog, clouds prevail

Partly cloudy with u
high lit the mid 70s.
W in d c a st I 0 - I 5
mph.

Hn W Wn H I by R I c M Napkin*

itA

Mark Hanna, led, and Chuck Holland faced off
yesterday at Mayfair Golf Course in Sanford. Mild

winter temperatures and open lairways...what better
reason does one need to live in Flouda ?

" I t ’s un excellent project for the
airport. It will mukc the ulijinrt |&gt;art
o f the lurger picture. When they
complete the hy|mss around the
ulrport In 1996 ihul will lie In
Voluslu County us w ell." he said.
C o o k e n oted the su ccessfu l
Skybus flights lo Newark will con-

Sec Airport. Page 2A

SUBSCRIBE T O THE S A N F O R D HE R A L D F O R THE B EST L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Call 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�bM h

H a iS B H H H iB iH

N

m

I H

h

h

M

NEWS FROM T H E R E G I O N AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

County
C on tin ued from P a g * 1A
•nearby Planlntlon properly. The county Will
ultlmntely nplll the coni of the
two properties with the state,
which will own them.
County officials are consider­
ing purchasing land at 49 sites
lo preserve It from development,
protect endangered plants and
animals, and to provide' recre­
ation and education for resi­
dents.
In August. Seminole County
was tapped lo become the na­
tional training headquarters for
U.S, Soccer Federation learns.
c o u c h e s a n d re fe re e s . T h e

M

■ i ■ ■ ir, 1■'’.JrJ 1
1
■■ i
r i I u 1I I

Y a n k e e L a k e h as been a
source of controversy since 3
u.m. on Nov. 8. 1985 when Ihc
county bought the land from
H e a th ro w d e v e lo p e r J r no

ly m O N B R M U B
Associated Press ------------------ ----------- 1
------- ;---------MIAMI (A P) — Their flight to freedom on a
Cuban airliner raised complex legal ques*

mcnl plant waa completed In
m k M 9 9 0 but w as Idle unlit
June 1991 when the wetlands
op airliner and five paaemgers who
to defect. About an hour toter. thoee
ig to the U A . w e n freed from the
detention center south o f Miami end

immunity. U.S,
U dilemma.
if the AeroCarfbo r a bracking?

During the routine domestic (tight from
H s v s n * to the reso rt c om m u n ity ' o f
Vamdero. two crew members, Including a
government security guard, were overcome
by the pilot and the crew.
Government lawyers are deeply divided
over the question and that reportedly
slowed the release o f the Cubans, according
to the State Departm ent
If the Incident la deemed a bracking, the
United SU tes would be required under
International law to Cither prosecute or
extradite the guilty parties. State Depart*
rnent spokesman Joseph Snyder mid.
The United States undertook that com*
mltment In a 1970 agreement and to obliged
to abide by It even though C uba to not a
signatory, Snyd er eaid.
But the U.S. has set the precedent of
making It easy for Cubans to settle here and
efforts to prosecute three Cuban retagees In
’ 1980 for hijacking a Cuban Ashing boat
resulted in Innocent verdicts.

The 48 Cubans who stayed, lncluc
plane’s pilot, are already being hi
heroes In a Cuban c a lk comrount
money, political clout and a pow em
In Washington, the Cuban Americ
tlonal Foundation,
The Cuban jo y e m r o e n t has corn
the freedom (fight aa a terrorist
aerial piracy.
"T h is Is a d e a r act of htfackln|
Artel Ricardo, spokesman for the
Interest Section In Washington. *T1
o f criminal activity to rejected
international community. In all co
there extoto legislation that prohfotto
The president of the Cuban Ai
Nations! Foundation sent a letter
Attorney Roberto M artinet exp
"grave concern" that the refugee* a
prosecuted.
In a letter written to If A . A
Oeneral W illiam Barr, Rep. Rol
Torricelli. D-New Jersey, wrote t

Mrfl
i tonal efforts to attract players
agreement w as reachcddnd the
and their families to local hotels
collection p rogram remained
and restaurants.
voluntary. Commissioners did
Sturm also noted the county- Increase collection teles Iff Optob e g a n c o n s tru c tio n o f th e
fare by about 81.40 per month to
Sanlando Softball Complex near
pay for added coats.
Altamonte Springs In 1993. T h e
The county also opened their
five-field complex will be located
new Central Transfer Station In
on top or a closed garb a g e
August. The $10 million fodlity
transfer station.
east o f UJI. Highway 17*93 on
R epublicans retained th e ir. Cdpnty Road 419 replaced the
grip oh the Seminole County
Sanlando Transfer Station as the
commission In November dephe
g a r b a g e d r o p -o f f p o in t fo r
Democratic oppostlon In a ll
south-county haulers. The etathree district races.
I lop also provided hew office* for
Pat Warren, a former, county
the Betid W aste tMvtoton.

Intangible taxes, which i
bonds and f o r * ,
■ales tax. The state cc
81.19 million In late Ink
taxes and 8809.043 In
quentaatos taxes.
The tardy taxpayers w
interest and fines, alt

Airport
llnue In 1993 with another
flight being added Jan. 11. The
com pany had exten ded the
special $19 tore until Jhc end of
the year.
" A lot of people are responding
T b s p n&gt; . lo that. W e’ve had 80 to 70
people boarding on. most days.”
n T h u n - be said,
•d lloa for
There have been a few delays
a, which In the Bkybus (lights but Cooke
uteneassa said hopefully those problems
as to pay havr been worked out.
Inal pro*
The helicopter taxi to the
14. M i : Orlande airport was hot dolitg ss
1,884 .da*■- well as expected. Cooke said. He
a a k fn e wohld be talking with
etttomSnt officials o f Bulldog Airlines soon
b u a b M » lo discuss their marketing aural*
a la t over egy.
Mttana to
"They're not doing aa well aa
life buM* they really need to do. They
f working need a little more advertising. I
i to cairn
hope to suggest that to them.”
Cooke said.

QreenWood Lakes I
though (he fsctlHy
property, county officials
there was not enough (to
treat the w astew ater to

gW f f * *
•J b th e

A third g e n e r a t io n . ptibllr
servant. Harrictl eaid OUt (fo

9 S S .
1 to the
e m a le
[W r in g

■J y , ™ S f . . h . r W M . p o lto
officer In the 1830* and 30a. My
father worked for the flte/d £
partmenl for 3 6 years aw t waa

Rollins College.'
•
He h as also taken several-tow
e n fo rc e m e n t m a n a g e m e n t
cqursrs from Ihc. FBI Academy
atwl the Unlveroty o f Virginia;
"M r y fo keep on top of things
adbiMl.Mfieeald.
, .Harriett has been tn.oontinu*
ous service I * the S&amp;nfoTO Police
Department for -IB years, he*
a i d ...................
For several yrara In the earty

"1 love to watch FSU football,
n a n Invaluable lesson for him.
b a s k e t b a ll a n d b a s e b a ll
; “ I learned s great deal about
whenever I can.” he said.
budgeting and management.”
.He also eqjoys playing guitar
hfc said. It w as a great expert- and listening to gospel music
cnee."
and say* he likes country and
- tn 1986 he was tapped to western (both kinds) music as
become the policy chtef. an
well.
'opportunity he relished greatly,
T loved the opportunity to
?Tm
Imple g u y . " ’ I
serve my community in this said. *
a real nowei
wav.” he said.
/M
.H a rrie tt to very active in the
AUtonce Church srhere he
Harriett and hto wife. Suite,
•n a a n d d e r.
have one aon. Sieve Jr.. 13.
Ito Spare lime, Harriett said
Harriett begins hto new Job on

■
SUNDAY
• vfc *

.
'?•V'

focoC d ed ra in fa ll for the
e flo d . e n d in g at 9 a .m .
huraday. totalled A t of an
ich,
T h e lempcralure al 9 a m.
Hlay w a s 61 d egrees and
M

Inland waters a moderate chopScattered showers and a few
thunderstorms.
Friday: Wind northeast 10 to

W

,' * ' “ d L 2 5 P l! ‘

ftl

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 31. 1992 - 9A

Routine traffic stop
Sanford thefts solved
leads to three arrests
Ratall thaft
Sanford police arrested Sheila Yvonne Wright. 20. 2180
Church Street. Sanford, on Tuesday. Officers said the w o In a
■tore at 3101 Orlando Drive, and w o seen removing tags (torn
a puree, then putting a shirt and (Um In the puree before
attempting to leave. She w o charged with retail theft.

Biks theft
Sanford police arrested Shaw n M. Ftynt. 18, 714 Laurel
Avenue. Sanford, on Tuesday. Police said he took a bike from a
man and attempted to ride off. They said the man chased him
to the 1800 block o f 8. French Ave.. where he wae
apprehended.

Warrant arrests mads:
•C a m bren Anderson Hoyt. 29, 3818 Cypress Ave.. Sanford,
turned himself In at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
Tuesday. He w o wanted on a warrant for foiling to appear on a
charge o f driving with a suspended license.
•D a v id McNealy. 43, 1414 Rosecllff Apartments, w o
arrested at the probation office Tuesday. He w o wanted on an
Orange County warrant charging him with violation of parole
on a conviction o f grand theft.
•P atrick Alan Shafer, 28, 417 12th 8treet, Sanford, w o
arrested at his residence Tuesday. He wad wanted for violation
o f parole on a conviction o f driving with a suspended license.
•L o u is Phillip Sirota, 27, o f Longwood. w o arrested at the
John B. Polk Correctional Facility Tuesday. He w o wanted on
warrants charging him with violation o f parole on a conviction
o f restating arrest without violence, and obtaining property
with a worthless check.
•A n n ie Louise Smith, *3 8 Lake Monroe Terrace, w o
arrested at her residence Tuesday. She w o wanted for
violation o f parole on a conviction o f burglary to a structure.
•C la u d e William Davis, 27. 810 w T2B th Street. Sanford,
turned himself In at the county tall Tuesday. He w o wanted for

• A vehicular burglary w o reported Monday near Lake
Mary. Monica Valle and Claudia Tabarea said their purses were
stolen from their vehicle while It w o parked at 2800 Sun Lake
Loop. Valle reported 8980 In Jewelry and cash w o taken from
her puree. Tabarea told deputies 9180 tn cash, and 81000 in
Columbian currency were taken from her purse.
•B o b b le Jo Young, 2816 Sun Lake Loop, near Lake Mary,
reported an attempted burglary at her residence. She told
deputies a man with a knife attempted to gain entry into her
house, but fled when she confronted him at the front door.

Incidents reported to Sanford poUoo:
• 8300 in copper pipe fittings were reportedly stolen
T u esd ay from a truck parked tn the fenced yard at
Therm-o-Tane Gas, 414 W . 9th Street In Sanford.
•D a v id Bnmett, of Altamonte Springs, told police hte 1984
Chevrolet station wagon, parked a week ago with mechanical
problems, at 1102 N. Lake Drive, in Northlake Village, ares
discovered missing on Tuesday.
•8 2 ,9 0 0 in tools and equipment arms reportedly stolen from
a storage trailer Monday at Bonn J. Contracting. Inc., 401 E.
AirportBtvd.
•8 2 3 1 In property waa reportedly stolen Monday from the
home o f Harold WiUlaina, 1902 W . 13th Street
•J o h n M o o n reported to police that a num ber o f Items of
clothing were removed from hta house at *8 3 William Clark
C o u rt between Dec. 17 and Dec, 24.
•B ev e rly Au^itaUhe reported her car area burglarised while
in a parking lot at the Salvation Arm y facility, 700 W . 24th
Street on Monday,. Fblke M id an estimate o f 8110 tnitam ags
area done to Uj* . vehicle. Her w alle t containing.an im*
rtftffmliw d amount o f rooooy woo reportedly stolen. The
eellett oritii credit cardo and pnotoa etlQ InaSde# v u recovered
a abort time later in an a lk y at 818 W . 20th Street

LAK E M ARY - A minor traffic
violation ended with three ar­
re sts b y L a k e M ary police
Tuesday. It also solved a stolen
vehicle report
Police stopped a vehicle at the
parking lot of Barnett Bank, 704
W7 Lake Mary Btvd. on Tuesday.
Officers said the vehicle w o
seen making an Illegal left turn
fttxn a drlve-ln restaurant.
Left turns at that location are
not permitted at this time due to
traffic restrictions Imposed by
the stalled Lake Mary Boulevard
widening project.
W h en the vehicle stopped,
police said one person, identified
o Joe N. Roux, 24, o f Altamonte
Springs, ran from the area on
foot. H? w o later apprehended.
The persona w h o remained In
the vehicle were Identified o
Olivia Maria Dawson, 20. of 268
N. 2nd Street Lake Mary, and a
man w ho gave the name of
Jam es Adkins, 29, o f Altamonte
Springs.
Officers filed the report re­
garding Adkins identifying him
o "John Doe".
During a check o f the vehicle,
officers reported finding a marl-

|uana cigarette In the ashtray
They also discovered the vehicle
had been reported stolen earlier
in the day in Winter Springs.
Adkins, Identified o the driver
of the vehicle, w o charged with
possession o f cannabis under 20
grams, making aft Improper left
turn, restating arrest without
violence, and grand theft auto.
Ruox w o charged with grand
theft auto, possession of can­
n abis under 20 gram s, and
restating arrest without violence.
D aw son w o charged with
g ra n d theft au to, and co n ­
structive possession of cannabis
under 20 grams.
All three were taken to the
John E. Polk Correctional Facill-

Sanford police arrested Re­
gina Renee Davis. 23, 102-A
Grovevlew Villas, Sanford, on
Tuesday. Davis turned herself
In to police following a lengthy
Investigation that reportedly
Involved several thefts. Police
said on Dec. 1, the woman
entered a store at 300 E.
Commercial Ave., and while

U u p m II

I a im m u
normi ot pvrvny

e Inc Oeven
»fs without
forest.

Cops: Stabbing

DENVER Four gay men
have been atabhed to death In
Denver's Capitol HID section this
year in what police said m ay be
the work o fa serial killer.
T h e latest victim. Anthony
Carr. 33, waa found dead tn hta
apartment Tuesday. The others
were slain in September, July
and February. Taro were found
in apartments; a third, a visitor
from Virginia, area found in his
motel room.
"T h ere are too many simi­
larities. That's bothering us a ll."
Detective BUI Fairchild said
Wednesday. "W e 're looking at
the paaaibUlty that all four could
have been committed by the
same assailant."
Police said they have not
found any links am ong the men

Friday through Sunday
Jan. 1 through Jan. 3

• W a y n e Thompson reported hta car w as m issing Monday
from a parking lot at 711 E. First Street The vehicle area later
found In an a lk y a t 907 Cyprero Avenue.

my little sister’
isooistsd Frees Writer_________

^ £

S A N LEANDRO. Calif. -

the teen-ager a

Uke

Juvenile Court on Wednesday,
one dev after she area charged
with using a pillow to m m U m t
her — HtJkHn 4 .year-old stater,
w h o died u n d e r m y a t e r t o u a
circum stances In A u gu st. A
court referee ruled that the girt

£

h

£

tnen caueo pottos, m e gin
arrested S u nday,
The n ^
o f t » * victim
b a r stater w ere withheld
p o lk * becauee o f their age.
The diary statement w as
one Unk to an Investigation

There's somethingnewtoremember. Fromnowon, when'
makelongdistancecalls withinthe407area, dial 0 or I +4
andthenmenumberyou'recalling.
Florida's tremendousgrowthhascreatedashortageof
telephonenumbers. Bydialingtheareacodeonevery long
distancecall, numbersare freedupifor newbusinessesa
and
nd
residential customers.
Soremember, whenyoudial longdistance, be suretousethe
areacode. Andif
evenaFAX machine, now's thetimetoreprogramthem.

H aw .
A s she left the courtroom, she
turned around, looked at the
rows o f relatives, friends and
renartets and said. "Ston looking
^
*

the 4 -y e a r-o ld h ad stop p ed
breathing; the exact cause w as
u n d e te rm in e d , B u t n a tu ra l
c a i ^ didn't explain the death,
and the police Investigation
"focused on unnatural all the

an accomplice kept the clerk
busy, she went behind the
counter and removed • 1,750
from the clerk'a puree. Police
charged her'w ith grand theft.
The accomplice w o not im­
m e d ia t e ly Id e n t if ie d . I n ­
vestigator* said the operation
w o similar to robberies re­
ported elsewhere In Sanford,
A lt a m o n t e S p r i n g s , a n d
Daytona Beach.

�N M

H

H

I

4A - Sanford Hsrsid, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Dacambar 31, 1902

Editorials/ Opinions
These will be the big stories of ’93
So many tasks, so few hours. Here, as a
time-saving public service, is an early peek at all
the news you'll need to know In the coming year
— the big stories of 1993.
One year from now, every run-of-the-mill
jmndit will be telling you the overriding story of

EDI TORI ALS

Don’t drink, drive
, . Keep your nam e out o f the Sanford Herald.
' Refrain fhftn drivin g under the Influence o f
alcohol on N ew Y ear’s Eve.
B y M onday, Jan . 4, all reports w ill have
been filed on D U I arrests N ew Y e a r's E ve an d
N ew Y ear's day. T h e follow ing day. the
Sanford Herald w ill pu blish a list o f nam es o f
a ll persona arrested for D U I In Sanford, Lake
M ary, Longw ood. an d the northern areas o f
Sem inole County.
W e w ill also Include local residents w h o
m ay have been arrested In the out*
outlying areas
depending on the Inform ation available.
L aw officers report N e w Y e a r's Eve and
July 4th are the tw o d a y s o f the year w hen
the m ost D U I arrests are m ade. There are
w ays to avoid bein g Included.
If the consum ption o f alcoholic beverages Is
required for you to enjoy the event, consider
the use o f the ever increasing n um ber or
. non-alcoholic beverages ouch a s a num ber o f
bran ds o f beer that are available w ith only .5
.. percent alcoholic content.
. T h ere are also a n u m ber o f m ixed drinks
available that can be consum ed w ithout
alcohol.
If you Insist on the real thing, use a
designated driver, an d take steps to Insure
(h a t the person d o esn 't "h a v e one • or tw o for
the r o a d .™

T O T HURRIED, HARRIED MAKING O P A
FOREIGN POLICY PRESIDENT.
After a cam paign grilling o f presidential
candidates on all conceivable domestic Issues,
President Clinton w a s promptly confronted with
three crises — all global, none local — that were
barely mentioned In 1992. a failure o f pols and
prea* alike*
Crisis I: Riots In Russia.
Soaring joblessness and unabated shortages
lead to massive' protests, which hardliners and
unreconstructed com m unists exploit. T his
threatens to topple Boris Yeltsin and end the
"capitalist experim ent" Shaken Western In­
telligence experts are unclear whether the
Russian military will step In — to preserve
democracy, Install dictatorship, re-lnvent the
Cold W ar, or break Into warring factions. Clinton
mobilises an urgent International aid effort with
m a jo r In fu sio n s o f m a n a g e ria l a d v iso rs.

Crisis 2) Nuclear
b la c k m a il p lo t
exposed.
A year ago, 1 feared
that a Jobless exS o v ie t n u c le a r
e n g in e e r a n d -o r
greedy military chief
w ould sell Mideast
terrorists a dirty little
nuke. Merctftilly, It
didn't happen — yet.
But U.S. and world
leaders have shown
too Uttle urgency to
this crlsIs-ln-waltlng.
It happens in ‘93 and
It is thwarted; U.S.
a n d Is r a e li in ­
telligence detect It;
Clinton leads a Unite d N a t io n s c o n ­
d e m n a t io n th a t
forces the weapons to

be surrendered and dismantled,
Crisis 3t Genocide In Bosnia triggers belated
global response.
New evidence o f systematic ethnic extermina­
tion by Serbs leads Clinton Into his boldest act as
a world leader. He blunty challenges all nations
to unite against genocide, recalls the Initial
Inattention to early reports o f Natl atrocities —
and calls upon all responsible leaders to pledge:
N ever again, w ill they respond to ethnic
cleansing by mere debating. Result: a truly
global military commitment forces Serbia to haft
Its affront to mankind.

So many
tasks, so law
hours. ■

A look back al 1992. with fond hope*
Clinton will really cut taxes for the middle
class like he said he would:
'Twaa the night before Clinton became our
new president,/ In Inaugural festivities (lint
will set a new precedent/ For parties among
leaders championing the middle class:/ Say.
Bill, we'd be happier if your bash cost less
cash.
A g a g g l e of
economists had come
to his stale/ To see
what was happening
In this Rhodes Schol­
ar's pate./ They all
say he wowed 'em
with hla knowledge
of theory./ Even If he
snoozed some when
he became weary.
But what an elec­
tion (he guy'd Just
come through./ Perot
called him "chicken
p lucker

MOM?J

Clinton’s

C a b in e t

O f course the b est tohtflftfi for O w e w ho
lust drin k alcohol. Is to Stay hom e, T h e new

eluding C lin to n 's.
(But don't worry a r t )
Fortunately Oov.
Clinton's most ap­
palling appointment
to date wasn't to a
Cabinet poet, but to
ttw» leadership of
tran sitio n team
duster in charge of
the aria, education,
l a b o r and the
h u m a n i t i e s . Hie
choice. Incredibly,
w a s J o h n e t t a 8.
Cole, whom The New
Republic (hardly s

p fiild in t who
mod to run
himself woo _
Jimmy Conor, f

fese*.Council, tbs Vcoeeremos Brigs
the AsMrican instltuis for Marxist Studl
U wtB give you some ides of Um Intc
the media's love affair with Mr. Clinton
o f this writing, no member o f it has yt
the dear man what (or who) prompted

Berry's World

[ W e w ish Steve Harriett w eU an d a sue*
Ceeoful career In his new jo b .

El ua o f the only thing that we can do In
our son. Yea. It was a magnificent
■as made juat for him. Not for you.
One day you will answer
have (eft had this happened to
L People who Will steal from (he
I even have a conscience.
*-.'Nam e withheld upon request
,&gt;
Sanford

OVERSTREET

A visit from St.
Nickles-from -us

' T raditloak lly, m ost la w enforcem ent agen-

Ity, w hich h as Im proved the cttiaen/pollce
CfaUkm ahlpo. '\
H e has w orked diligently to support the city
om m taaion in oil aspects o f crim e fighting
n d citizen protection projects. H e h as also
Kept the police budget trim m ed w ithout
redu cin g services.
j T h e experience H arriett gain ed aa head o f
m e Sanford Police Departm ent w ill com e In
fo o d y In h it new Job. S h o rifl D on EsUnger
f i l l assign Harriett the pootthm o f director o f
abe deportm ent ofadm lnlotrotton. H e w ill also
Serve os acting sheriff w h en ever EsUnger Is

C L IN T O N O K 'S M A N AG ED -C O M PETITIO N
H EALTH PLAN.
The recession recedes, spurring Job-creating
investment — and Clinton's major domestic
controversy Is his rejection of health plana of
liberals and unions.

SARAH

• In addition to the riek o f bein g revealed a s s
person arrested for D U I. there are additional
risks su c h a s the d an ger o f an accident that
could cause injuries o r even death to those
involved. Even If there la n o property dam age
o r ca r destroyed y o u cou ld obtain' enough
pplnta to have y o u r d riv e r's license revoked
and/or car insurance costs sky-rocket.

I r a tim e people realised that drivin g under
&gt;e influence o f alcohol Is not the w ay to
rlebrste the holiday. It'a foolish, an d could
tuse Im m easurable grief to everyone In-

Other big stories of *93:
PEACE PREVAILS ON W E S T BANK, OO LAN
HEIGHTS.
Experts scoffed when I told you this would
happen a year ago; it didn't, but historic
negotiations began and the framework for peace
now exists.

correct)

It was shock
of a year for
Mg men going
bad. ■

h im " b o z o " a n d
p o r t r a y e d hla
culture/ Aa a horror
film s o u n d s t a g e
overseen b y a
vulture.
In *89 Bush said we needed to forget
Vietnam./ yet Bill Clinton made a very good
target./ For all of Bush' barbs about Hill's not
going:/ A l one point It threatened to prove his
undoing.
But even conservatives conceded this race/
Did nothing but stumble, stagnate and lose
face./ Republicans were snuggled, all safe In
their b e d s j While visions or ‘96 danced In
their heads.
The right wing was wailing la see if wife
Hillary/ Will help wear Bill’s pants and dp
_ sillary./
__ Like say
_
Ids, sue your
something
parents!" Rush Limbaugh's so flustered/ To
see the support this strong woman has
mustered.
Phil Gram m w as safe In his 963,000 house/
In hopes the Ethics Committee won't think
he's a louse/ Because appraisers say the home
la ,worih 9117 grand/ And he did help his
contractor from S A L quicksand.
And I in my moderate Democrat cap/ Had
lust settled down for a four-year-long nap/ I
hoped would bring an ere of plain common
sense./ With extremist views on both sides
dismissed aa nonsense.
When upon m y fax machine (here arose
such a clatter/ I sprang from my bed to see
what was the mailer./ Then what to my
wondering eyea did appear./ Than some GOP
centrists saying. "B e of good cheer.
"W e have a big tent and all may have
shade/ If they believe moral decisions arc
really beat made/ By each citizen privately.
Fiscal care la our mission./ You can call us the
Republican Majority Coalition."
Then next to my wondering eyes did
appear/ A 20-year senator with reputation so
dear/ Accused o f pawing and kissing women
in hia office/ His excuse? "I w as drunk:" he
doesn't think he should quit.
In a huff Packwood snapped. "W h y noi
pick on Inouyc?/ “He's a Senator too. and his
hairdresser says/ He "Fondles her regularly,
hut It's Just that she/ "Didn't want to risk
losing a rich client's money."
II w as a heck of a year for big men going
body New York's mightiest Judge at his lover
got mad:/ Prosecutors say she broke up with
Judge Wacbtler/ So he threatened and sent
condoms to her young daughter.
The state department's trying to pul hack
the stuff/ In the president-elect's (11c. lately
treated ao rough/ By high-level folks out on a
witch hunt/ Fdr something, anything, done
while he w as you ng.
SUeiaand led the elite in boycotting Aspen/
For a Colorado law against men loving men J
Will worse come to worse and the wealthy
among us/ Have to vocation in Hawaii. New
York or Columbus?
Corporate execs tried to avoid Clinton
(axes/ Proposed for the richest: and ao they
sent faxes/ Buying stock, selling others:
Disney brass were moat tricky./ "Sell Donald.
sell Goofy, buy Minnie and Mickey!"

*-! ’ r Z * * - f * t ~V i 'J i

* *.

•-

�B H N V I IlljP Q S V p V B H S H iH B B

BbhH W H H bI H

Sheriff
1A

ties and to gel schools to cooper­ or Seminole County and the
ate in getting high-risk youths sheriff's office." Eslingcr. "II will
Involved in som ething other give them u chance to see
than criminal uctlvlllcs." said first;hund the functions oT the
Esllnger. "W e will look for In­ sheriff's office and hopefully
volvement or law enforcement
alleviate any misconceptions
throughout the county.",
they have.'*
Esllnger said the PAL may
Esllnger antlclpntes little or no
Involve competitive sporting ac­ uelual expenses with the CPA.
tivities but will serve to. Involve Procchcl will also oversee the
law enforcement olTleera -with CPA.
children.
In other new programs. EslA n other p rogram E slln ger
Ingcr'wlll create a one-man gang
wants to create is a Citizens supresslon unit comprised of
Police Academy to acquaint the
Investigator Kent Showaltcr and
public with the fonctlons, duties occasional officers that will be
and life or sheriff's deputies.
assigned to the unit. Esllnger
Esllnger visualises a 12- to
said Showaltcr will Initially pro­
1 4 -w cek c o u rs e o r w q e k ly
vide a clearinghouse for Informa­
s e s s i o n s In a h e r i r r 's r e ­
tion about g a n g and group •
sponsibilities that will Include
criminal activity.
on-the-road experience with
The Information may com e'
deputies.
from patrol deputies and In­
"W e want to develop a better
vestigators. elly poller agencies.
partnership between the people

he Ik uncertain ir the
program will require hiring an
additional atalTer. Initially, shcrItTa spokesman George Procchcl
will overset' the program, but
Esllnger said u full-time staffer
may be needed to supervise the
program.
Formation of a PAL will re­
quire appointment or a board or
dlreelora that will seek taxexempt status. Esllnger said.
Eslingcr said the PAL will olTer
uthcletic alternatives to children
from all backgrounds. Including
those who are beginning to
exh ibit potentially crim in al
problems. Esllnger said he will
look to school officials to rerer
problem atic children to the
program.
"T h e objective Is Tor youths or
all segments or the community
to gel Involved In athletic activi­

school officials and residents.,
said Esllnger.
Eslingcr would not say bow
muny Seminole County youths
a rc In v o lv e d In o r g a rils c d
groups, but said "the potential Is
there" for hundreds of youths
and yo u n g adu lts to be In
looscly-knll groups.
"O u r people have noticed an
Increase In gung-fdalcd activi­
ty." said Eslingcr. "I don’t know
how organised It Is.y et. but
there’s enough to keep the unit
busy."
Eslingcr said the unit should
eventually become "operation­
a l" and begin actively collecting
Information about gang-related
criminal activity through the use
of confidential contacts. Eslingcr
said he anticipates no additional
expenses from the specialised

unitEsllnger will also hire victim,,
a d v o c a te v o lu n t e e r B o n n ie
Summers to become a full-time
I'oordlnalor for the program,
which typically Involves 15 and
20 volunteers providing comfort
and counseling to victims o f rape
and other crimes. .Esllnger said
Summers, who Is currently an
unpaid reserve deputy, will be
paid the same rule as a beginn­
ing deputy, about $21,000.
Investigator Lourdes .Porter,
who now oversees the victim
advocate program, will devote
■his full time to violent crimes
Investigations, said Eslingcr.
Another Esllnger plan Is to,
purchase a $6,500 voice stress
analyser to replace many of the
fonctlons now served by a poly­
graph machine operated by Lt.
John ThdTpe. Eslingcr said use

of the machine will cut new
employee Interview time from
two hours or more to an hour or
less.
The VS A . which measures
subtle changes In voice tonality.
Is easier to use than the poly­
graph. which measures other
bodily changes. The VCA cun
also use recordings made iu
person or over a lelcphonc ito
opposed to a polygraph whlcW
requires monitors to be strapped
lo the subject, sold Esllnger. •
"It’s much more cost-effective
lo have two or three deputies
and sergeants trained to use It
than one 1160(60801.” Eslingcr
said.
Esllnger said the cost of the
device has been offset In departmcntal savings from o th e r*
expenditures of $500Jr more.

SchoolL E U A B. BR AM A H
Leila B. Brahan. 95. of Lingo
Circle. Oviedo, died Wednesday.
Dec. 30. at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Bom Dec. 2. 1897. In
Thomas County. Oa.. she moved
lo Central Florida In 1972. She
was a registered nurse and a
Protestant. .
Survivors Include nephews.
C.D. Boatwright. Reno. Nev..
Earl Boatw right. G reenville.
Mich.: niece. Edith Wlllsmore.
Pearson. Ga.. Joyce Menders.
Tulsa. Okla.
B a ld w ln -F a trc h lld Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge oT ar­
rangements.
1 A M U B L “S A M " L .D A V IS
Samuel "S am ” L. Davis. 73. or
P a rk C o u rt. S a n fo r d , d ie d
Tuesday. Dec. 29. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Bom Sept. 14. 1919. in
Montgomery. Ala., he moved to
Sanford horn East Tennessee In
1963. He was a public school
teacher and a Methodist. Mr.
Davis was a member of Elks
Lodge. American Legion and
Antique Car Club. He was an
Army Air Corps veteran of World
W artl.
He Is survived by his wife.
Barbara.
Briason Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.

Mary E. Montgomery. 89. of 37
Calhoun St.. Batonville. died
Tuesday, Dec. 29. at Park Lake
Health Care Center. Winter Park.

public forum and
tn May. the board finally selected
Dr. P a u L Hagerty. the superin­
tendent o f the S p rin g fie ld .
Missouri, school system.
Board members described hfm
a s ’ ’e x p e rie n c e d " an d " I m ­
p ressive" and expressed the
belief that he possessed the skills
necessary to lead the district
though tough financial times.
Hagerty, who took over the
helm In June, agreed to a
contract that would pay him
$97,000 plus benefits per year.
The total amount the district will
spend on his package Is nearly
$160.000annually.
Board members, who have the
option to renew Hagerty’s con­
tract each year are favorably
Impressed with the Job he has
done so Car.
" I think we made a good
choice." said Nancy Warren,
who w as chairman o f the board
when Hagerty w as selected. "I
think he has shown great leader­
s h ip t h r o u g h s o m e to u g h
times.”
More than 100 teachers and
support personnel were laid off
at the end o f the 1991-92
academic year, though most of
them have been rehired as other
em ployees’ retired o r sought
employment elsewhere. The cuts
came offer the stale cut the
district's financial allotment due
to b o t h b u d g e t c u t s a n d
overestimated enrollment fig­
ures.
P rincipals at nine disti
schools played musical, cha
on new. positions I

,B o r n A u g . 1 4 . . 1 9 0 3 . In
T a lla h a s s e e / she m oved lo
Central Florida In 1921. She was
a retired cook and a Baptist.
Survivors include daughter.
Doris Glover Bennett. Batonville:
son. James A.. Atlanta: sister.
Ruth Willis. Akron. Ohio: two
grandchildren and one great­
grandchild.
Golden’s Funeral Home The..
Winter Park. In charge o f ar­
rangements.

Thom as C. Steiner. 74. of
Jaycox Road. Avon Lake. Ohio,
died Wednesday. Dec. 30. In
Sanford. Bom Dec. 12. 1918. In
Nankin. Ohio, he was a winter
resident of Central Florida. He
was a waste treatment operator
and a Lutheran. Mr. Steiner was
a Navy veteran.
Survivors Include daughter.
Rebecca Wlrih. North RldgeviUe.
O h io: son. D a v id . S a n fo rd .
Thomas. Avon Lake.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n eral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
rangements.

da v 1t. w umubl “Saar* l .
* Mm m t M m tv tea «»r Mr. Dsvto will to
tMvrtoy. Jan. I, at t pm. in Sw
Fwmral CfctoMj Crsmatton w

to M*t to tto Kto't OilWrsn'i Hupltol. *0,
Bto M». UrnsSHs. FMVM sr aw American
FI.
tontoramnil

than a week affer the close of operating on the modified calen­
school In June. Parents were dar by 1995. The possibility of
outraged, but the principals ad­ p u llin g the d is t r ic t 's h igh
justed and the new academic schools on the year round calen­
year began without a hitch.
dar Is being studied, but no
A new board member. Larry decisions have been made on the
Stiiekler. look a scat on the dais matter.
with the others, while long-time
Seminole High School tn. San ­
board member.-Nancy Warren
ford was proposed as a magnet
retained her seat for a fourth school as a way o f bringing inetr
te rm ..
enrollment up to par with other
Striekler. who has served the district hfgh schools, thdugh
district In a number .of volunteer that plan was not well received
leadership roles, Including the. by the public.
chairmanship of the superin­
The school has been selected
tendent selection committee, as the pilot site for an ackdemy
won the District 4 scat left ol health careers where studehts
vacant when Joe Williams de­ may receive specialized training
In a wide variety oT healthcided not to seek another term.
Striekler takes office at a time related careers from medical
when many changes are coming. assistant to pre-medical pre*
A seventh high school may or
...
may not be built In the district
In addition. Seminole Joined
over the next year and a half: Midstay and Geneva elementary
rcxonlng is being considered as a schools as the pilot schools for
way to alleviate the overcrowded the foil-service school program
conditions at some schools and where community service pro­
the low student count at others: grams. such as medical care and
year round education Is proceed­ governm en t a s s is ta n c e ’ p r o ­
ing through the elem entary grams. are brought to the school
schools. where families In the community
This year Goldsboro Elemen­ can have easier access to them.
tary School In Sanford Joined Ibe
At the close of the last school
ranks of those schools convert­ year, courtesy busing was elimi­
ing lo the mod IRed calendar this nated except for cases where
year.
walking conditions are consid­
A c c o r d i n g to p r i n c i p a l ered hazardous, according to
Geraldine Wright the move to state guidelines. Students who
year round education has been • live closer than two miles .to
nn easy one because o f the • their zoned school must. In
education of and cooperation almost all cases, walk or ride
with the parents In the commu- bicycles to school.

routes would be eliminated,
there were still great protests
when the routes were ellmlControversy arose from trage­
dy early In the school year wbert
three Lakcvkw Middle School
students were struck by a run­
aw ay trailer while waiting at
their school bus stop on State
Road 46-A outside the Hills of
Lake Mary subdivision. Tw o of
the students. Arcadlo Vergarra
a n d M ic h a el B eck ler. w ere
seriously Injured: the third.
Jeremy MUlhousc. was killed.
Parents, who have been asking
lo have .bus stops moved away
Ih m busy roadways, protested.
The cities o f Longwood and Lake
Mary tried, unsuccessfully, to
enact law s making it Illegal for
tha wtopa to be placed on heavily
travelled highways.
T h e bus stop where the acci­
dent occurred w as igoved tem­
porarily Inside the subdivision,
other site* are being studied on
an Individual basis.
The year concluded with dis­
trict officials and the employees
unable to resolve l h « r contract
negotiations. Though a special
m aster eras called tn to make
recommendations on a settle­
ment, the two sides have agreed
to return to the bargtanlng table
early In January afftr the dis­
trict rejected the rqpommendalions o f the Special master.
T V H-liflol ftttorid fo rm in.

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PIRRONR I N T I II R T IO IN
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�Sports
UOCALLY
Lakers slip past Magic
OKI.ANDO — Aullium Peeler kept I hr Lakers
vvilliiti striking distance and Sam IVikins scored
mnr points in ihr lin.il six minutes .is Los
Angeles stopped ,i ilirrr game losing streak willi
.1 96-93 \ trim x m n I hr Orlando Magic
I'rrln li.nl .ill six ol I hr l.akcis' points in thr
Iiisi li.ili nl thr limnh i|ti.irliT hrliirr I'rrkins
11ink oxer Willi Oll.imr.i lt.nliiiii H.r&gt; 77 mill
llirc.ilcmug In pull axv.iv
I’rrkins 21 points spoiled .1 23-point. 211
irhnnntl rllurl h\ Otl.iniln's Sli.iqulllc O'N'e.tl
\lrk Allili 1SUM S .1(1 Iril I III' Magic

Rollins wins again
WIN I KK I’AKIx — David Wnll srniril 22 pninis
.mil Drrrk Thnrsinn .nlilctl III .is Knllins pi ll
InnuliI nil \rw I l.i\i ll |A "ll In will H2 Kfi

U C F whips Maine
OKI.AM Xl - Darryl D.ivls Iril llvr rrn lr.il
Florida pl.in'is in ilnnhli' ligurcs ns thr Knights
rased p.issnl Miimr (5-2| 7H 67
D.n Is li.nl 2&lt;l Ini Crnll.ll Klorld.i (4-5) Also hi
dnnhlrs urn Sinn.i I’ lilllips ( 1«&gt;| Victor S.ixinn
1 1 II. .I.inn s W.ilkri 1111.mil Killin' Fnsirr I IO|

That’s
more
like
it
Tribe cagers shine in Polk Classic
Memorial Gymnasium.
The mnming contest was all Seminole as the Tribe
Herald Sports Writer
defense held Dr Phillips to less than 10 pninis In each
LAKELAND - They're hack
nl the first three quarters while building a 39-2.3
Not thill they really went anywhere. Iml nlij-r their advantage.
performance In the Folk Holiday Classic ulrls’ basket­
Sophomore point guard Tennlshia Eason [Kipped in a
ball tournamrni. the Seminole I Dull School l-Tghtliig game-high IH points, while Nlkl Washington added 17
SemlnoU's appear ready lo reassume their place amonu points, seven assists. 10 blocked shots and live steals as
the slate's elite.
the Tribe won (heir 10th game nl the season lull luma
In Tuesday's consolation bracket. the Tribe knocked Faison chipped In with six points and three steals and
nil defending Class -IA state ehampinn Dr. I’hllllps Kay Kay Mullins had six points to complete the scoring.
47-34 In a morning contest.
Dr. Phillips (6-7) was led by Art Inn .Jackson with 17
Seminole then came hack In the afternoon In nip the points.
No. 4-mnkcd team in Class 3A. Cape Coral-Mariner.
The evening contest lound Mariner coming hack from
01-59 In overtime, in finish with a 4-1 record and claim a 31-20 halftime deficit with a shot at the buzzer to tie
ntth place in the Innrnmncnt lot the second straluhl the game at 52-52 and send the game Into overtime.
year.
Seminole jumped nut In a sl.x-poltit lead In overtime,
"It's strange. We llnlsli with the seeotid best record In only In tltucw the hall away twice In let the game get
the tournament and route in tilth, hot that's the way It close. Mariner lilt a shot at the linal horn to make the
goes." said Seminole head coach .John McNamara. flnal margin two points.
"T h e ulrls played well and did a real good |nh except lor
Washington had another hlg all-around game In pare
the loss to Hrthlrhrm. when we didn't play any defense. the Tribe statistically. The senior forward scored 20
We're enmlnu on strong and playing a lot better."
points, grabbed IO rebounds, handed nut nine assists,
The Tribe Improved to I 1-0 with the wins. The girls blocked seven shots and claimed six steals.
will return to the court lor three home games next
Also having good games for the winners were Eason
week. On Tuesday. Jan. 5. they host Lake Howell. I IK points, five assists). Faison (six points, five
Wednesday. Spruce Creek conics calling and on rebounds, four assists, three steals). Mullins (six points.
Thursday. Lake Hrautley pays a visit in Hill Fleming T See Tribe. Page 2B
By D E A N SM ITH

Jordan cools heat
MIAMI — lust whrn II Innkrd ns though
Mi.mil ought In .ii Chicago Ini i In* llrsi ilmr.
Mirli.n*l.Innlnii uni lint mid iltr llr.il wrni rnld.
lord.ill srnii'd 30 nl Ills 39 points In the
si rnnil linll ns tin Hulls won 105- 1(H)
( ili-n Klrr sm ird 1111 lur Ml.mil. Illi'IndillU lln rr
.( pomtrrs m iIn* Hnnl .36 srrnuds
I Inr.irr Grant had 20 points I nr the Hulls

TALLAHASSEE - Sum Cassell lied n ca­
reer-high wlili il l points mid hnckt niirt niiilr
Hnh Surn keyed n scmniMinll surge with ilirrr
il poiutrrs in li-ml IHlh-rnnki'd Klnrldii Slntr in n
0-1-73 victory ovrrSouth Florida
Sum scored 14 nl Ins 23 points In (lie second
hull Hyron Wells added I I points mid Kodnrv
Dnhnrd had l() points, nine rehounds and six
blocks lur Florida Slate (H 3|.
Derm k Sharp and Chris Coleman led South
Florida with 1H pointsaplei r.

Tam pa romps

LAKELAND — Hill Drost scored I I points to
lead a balanced attack as Florida Southern
defeated Central Missouri Stair (b-3) 75*53.
Scott Head mid Chris l.cr each had K) points
and llvr rebounds lor Florida Southern (0-3).

F T U stom ps visitor
MKI.HOUKNK - IJryan Thrrrlault and Peter
Walcott riH'h scored 13 points to give FTl) it
70-5H victory over Westbrook College (H-2|.
Sheriiimi ilam llloii Itiid 1 I points lor Florida
Tech (3-5). Dim Klehlcr and David .Johnson,
who laid I I rehoulids. each had 10.

Texas Te c h edges ’Canes
COKAL GABLES — Sheryl Swoopes hit an
IH-lool juniper with 30.(i seconds left In
overtime to lilt 11 ill-ranked Texas Tech to a
75-7-1 victory over N'o. 22 Miami.
Swoopes iiad 30 points and I I rebounds lot
the Lady Kaidcrs (H-1). while Della Wilson hull
2 1 pninis anti Vicki I'lowden 21 points and 10
ii hounds for Miami (5-2).

WHAT'S HAPPENING
Girls’ Basketball
Lady War Eagle Holiday Classic: Lake Mary vs.
Titusville Astronaut. 2:30 p.m.

Boys’ Soccer
Pizza Hutlnvitalional: at Edgewater High
S c h o o l — L a k e B r a n t l e y v s .D a y t o n a
Beach Seabreeze-Bishop Moore winner, filth
|J1ace. noon, Clearwator Central Catholic vs
Tampa Chamberlain, third place. 2 p m ; Lyman
vs. Lake Mary Championship. 4 p m.

FOOTBALL
Op III
Ills college. ti.llOI Howl Florida VN
North( uinliu.i Stale. (|.|
C o m p le ta llatings on Page 2 B

(O TI
Seminole 161)
Ea*on 8 7 3 18 Fai*on 7 7 4 6 Glllin* 0 0 0 0
Morgan 3 17 5 W aihington 17 7 4 76 Boone 0 0 0 0
Mullin* 3 0 76 Total* 77 7 IS61
Cape Coral Mariner (S9)
Aldridge 4 I S 9 Robmxon 0 7 3 7, Le Jones 3 7 7
13. Kreig 8 3 3 71. La Jone* 3 4 4 14 Total* 77
17 16 S9
Seminole
14 I I 14 7
9 - 41
Cape Coral Ma nner
6 14 19 11 7 - 5 9
Three point held goal*
Mariner 3 (K reig 7.
Leona II Team loul* — Seminole 14 Mariner I?
Fouled out
M anner. La Jone* Technical*
none Seminole 11 6. M anner II 3

F r o m Staff Re p orts

Cassell leads FSU rout

Drost leads Southern charge

C O N SOLATIO N C H AM P IO N SH IP
S E M I N O L E 81. C A P E C O R A L M A R I N E R 59

Seminole
booters
hold own
in tourney

AROUND THE STATE

TAM I’ A — Dr Carlo Devenux scored 20 points
mid Tmiipn forced 3fi turnovers Wednesday to
defeat Uuiimlplnc |5-2| 01-77
The Spartans |H-1| surued ahead by 13 In (he
second hall bv racking up layups and dunks nil
most o f the 17 steals Tampa made. Ucgglr Larry
scored 15 points and hud eiulii assists.

P O L K H O L I D A Y CLA SSIC
CO N SOLATIO N B R A C K E T
L A K E L A N D H I G H S CHO OL
S E M I N O L E 41, DR P H I L L I P S 14
Seminole (41)
E.ixon 9 01 11. Faiion 3 00 6, G lllm t 0 6 0 0
Morgan 0 0 0 0. Waihlnqlon 8 0 0 I/. Boone 0 0 0 0
Mullin* 30 0 6 Total* 330 3 43
Dr. Phillip* (34|
Woodard 10 0 7. Jack*on 7 0 0 17. Bailie* 3 1 4 7
B arra 7 0 0 6. Cummlng* 1 00 7 Dor*ey 0 0 7 0
Total* 14 16 34
Seminole
IS 17 13 I - 47
Or Phillip*
• I
7 II - 34
Three point held qoal*
Seminole 1 (Wa*hmg
Ion). Dr Phillip* S (Jjickxon 3, B arra 71 Team
loot*
Seminole 8 Dr Phillip* 6 Fouled out
none Technical*
none Record*
Dr Phillip*
67

Herald Photo by K«n|o Zabulungl

In a rematch of their 1992 Class 4A state semifinal, Joel
Dewberry (No. 6) and the Lyman Greyhounds jumped on
top of tho Tampa Chamberlain Chiefs in a hurry, scoring

three goals in the game's first 16 minutes on their way
to a 4-0 victory and a berth In this afternoon's Pizza Hut
Invitational championship game against Lake Mary.

’H ounds, Rams renew rivalry
B y T O N Y D a S O R M IE R

Herald Sports Editor
OKLANDO — Tills afternoon's championship game In
tlie Pizza Hut Invitational high school hoys' soccer
tournament Is akin to agreeing to a blind date, only to
find out your mystery partner ts tIk * person next door.
At 4 p.m. at Edgewater High School, tlie Lyman
Greyhounds and Lake Mary Itams will write a new
chapter to their storied soccer rivalry when they square
ofTln the Pizza Hut finals.
"H ere we go again." said both Lyman coach Hay
Sandldgc and Lake Mary coach Larry MeCorklc.
While both Sandldgc and MeCorklc might have
preferred to face someone, anyone else — the two teams
have already placed once this season and could play
two more times — Hie priority both coaches had was to
make It to the championship game and test their teams
against the best the tournament had to offer.
If it means playing each other again, so be It.
Both team s have gathered steam during the
tournament, laboring through first round wins and
turning In solid performances during Hie quarterfinals.
On Wednesday, the two squads gave clinics. Lyman
ripping Tampa-Chamhcrlaln 4-0 and Lake Mary taking
care ol Clearwater Central Catholic 4-2.
Chamberlain and Clearwater Central Catholic will
play fur third place today at 2 p.m.
hi other urtion Wednesday. Lake Brantley won two
games to advance to the consolation bracket final,
scheduled to kick o ffa l noon, beating Whiter Park 2-0
and Tampa-Lcto 4-3 on penalty kicks. The Patriots will

play the winner of Wednesday night's Bishop MooreDaytona Beach Seabreeze contest.
Earlier Wednesday. Tampa-Lcto eliminated Oviedo
1-0 despite playing the entire second half down a player
because of an ejection. Daytona Beach-Seabreeze
ousted Boone 2-1 and Bishop Moore bounced Coconut
Creek 4-2 to advance to their consolation bracket
semifinal showdown.
Lyman wasted no time in Jumping all over the
Chamberlain Chiefs, scoring three goals I11 the first 16
minutes to lake control of their contest at Bishop Moore
Memorial Stadium.
Mike Sells opened the scoring with a goal at 1:06.
Frank Cipolla. seeing Ills first action o f the tournament,
played a corner kick that John Scott headed to Sells,
who knocked the ball home.
Eight minutes later. Mike Blcrly played a shot olf the
cross bar fora 2-0 Lyman lead. At 15:4H. Joel Dewberry
nodded In a Hirow-ln from Dan McAvoy. prompting
Chamberlain to change goalkeepers.
Sells capped the scoring with a goal at 70:16. assisted
by John Bernard.
"Before the game, the guys were very, very serious.”
said Sandldgc. "I told Lou Cioffl and Dave Fall, my
assistant coaches, that they were either really focused
or they were scared. Well, they put that to rest In a
hurry. They were really ready to play.
"T h e first half was the best soccer we’ve pluyed of the
tournament. We created great chances and we didn't
allow Chamberlain any opportunities. That's the name
o f the gam e."
□ See Soccer, Page 2B

K IS S IM M E E
\\ In 11 111 si
approached x* till tin nli .1 nl pi.i\ mi;
in .1 louruamcni Seminole High
Sr Imill liuvs sorer 1 ro.irh ( .ulus
Mrrlino was moii ili.iu .1 lntl&lt;
.lppH'hrllst\ i
(III Wrdlirsil.lX melll .lltil Ills
Ii -.ill 1 roiliplelrll pl.ix ill Hie ( 1 11lr.1l
Florida &lt;'ll.till III!!' Mi llion xx.is
giving serious 1111 •! ILLIII III accepting
.1 promised Invtl.iltiin in pl.ix in m-xt
vear's inmii.mn 111
"W e r e I • 111x 1 nil 1mil Ingi-lllri .is
.1 team." said Mriliim xvltnsi ir.nn
picked up .1 Ini tell XXIII nx I I Vein
lieaeli and dmppeil .1 I m in ismii In
Fort Walinn Beat li t 'hm t.ixx h.iiehn
Wednesday. "W e spent .1 1 nuple nl
dnx's Ingel bet. playing games and
nailing in pl.ix games
"I'm serluuslx 1 nnsidi ring going
bark in this tnmiiameui The gnxs
plaveil bard and were vnx cniupi 11
live. I think we'll si 1 (hllrirurr in
nut play when xxe resume mil
eiiulereuei' schedule
Si'inllinle. xiliirli scored a pall nl
xx-ins over Slum 1 South Furl* on
Monday and Tuesday alierunnus
slinxxed up *81 Sllxri Spills Stadium
Ini Its IO a III. rnlisnlal lull bracket
game XVItll Vein Iteaell Weduesilax
morning Hm Vein Beach a 7-0
xvlnner nvrt KissimmeeCialexvax
T uesilav. didn't shnxx
Five liniiis laiei lln Tribe laird
( Tmelawlialeliee I Hi-31 111 lln eon
sol,it mn him In i Duals sutlrhug a
l-t) loss 1111 an own goal 13 imuules
Illln llle secnlid ball As a result.
(Tiuelaxvlialeliee Imished till Ii In tin
16-leam draw while Semlunlt- i aim
In sixth
Despili' being nlilslinl Ifi-K I&gt;x
I Tim laxvIiaiiTn e. Si mlnnli bail sex
era I iiu is ia u d ln g e lta u e e s in
equalise. lulling lln 1 mss bar I xx1• •
with shuts inxx aril tin coil nl tin
game.
(Tini'lawbaleliee also bail a 13
edge III enritei kicks met llir Tribe
Si'tllllinle goalie Jon Williams, xx bn
xv.is named In Hie All T mu ii.nm nl
leant, made sex I'll sax i s
Tallahassee 1.1llenl 11 lie I call ll
Melbiiurni' 2 1 in Hie ebaiupimislup
game
The Seminnles xxill teiiirn In
aeilmi mi Jan. (i xx11 11 a limin' garni
against Hie Lviu.in CrexTimuids tin
Ian 7. the Inin xxill bnsi fTagld
I’alin Cnasl

Ducker helps Rams into championship game
someone different at point guard.

F r o m Btaff R oporto_______________________________

TITUSVILLE — To paraphrase a bit o f ancient
wisdom, one player's foul trouble Is another
player's opportunity.
With starting point guard*LaShawn Merrick on
Hie bench with four fouls. Jennifer Dui ker came
In and helped pilot the Lake Mary Hams to a
43-39 win over St. Petersburg-Lakewood In thr
first round of tlu* Lady War Eagle Holiday Classic
glrls' basketball tournament at TitusvilleAstronaut High School.
Lake Mary (10-2) will play Astronaut at 2:30
p.m. this afternoon In the championship game ot
the four-team tournament.
Merrick and Diane Duller eventually fouled out
for Lake Mary against St. Petersburg'-Lakewood
as the Hams where whistled for IH personal

ST. P E T E R S B U R G L A K E W O O D (39)
Henderson 4 5 8 14, Hay** 6 5 8 17. Gra y 10 17. Jackson 7 0 1 4 .
Stephens 1007 Total* 1410 1839
L A K E M A R Y (471
Merrick 7 0 14. Fergu*on 51711. Raguccl 1 7 3 4. Ducker 0 1 3 1 .
Morris 6 13 13. Dubcr 11 3 3. Grelsslng 7 3 6 7. Belli 0 0 0 0 Totals
17 9 18 43
SI. Pat* Lakewood
10 8
7 14 - 39
Lake Mary
17 4 13 10 — 43
Three point field goal*
Lakewood I I Henderson I Total louls —
Lakewood 77. Lake M ary 18 Fouled out — Lakewood Henderson
Lake M a ry. M errick and Duber Technical* — None Records —
Lakewood6 3. Lake M ary 10 7

fouls, sending Lakewood to the free throw line for
1Hattempts.
"W e got ourselves into loul trouble." said Lake
Mary coach Anna Van Laiidlngham. "That
created some confusion for us. 011 the coach's
part and the players' part, having to work In

"Jennifer Ducker stepped tight in there lor us
and did a good Job. Jennifer Grelsslng and
Karenl Morris also helped Ducker with handling
the situation. Il really pulled us together as a
team."
Morris led Hie Itams with 13 points and took
several turns down the court running Hie Lake
Mary attack from the point guard position.
Grelsslng came oil the bench to contribute seven
polntm nine rebounds and four steals. Junior
forward Dunn Ferguson added 1 1 points.
For St. Petersburg-Lakewood (6-3). Nakla
Hayes netted a game-high 17 (Kilnls while
Gylauuda Henderson knocked down 14 points
before fouling out

�■-

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a c v c tr u b b Ip i b ) a n d '
Belinda Morgan (five pointd.
(h ire atealal.
"Morgan made a big difference
in c»ur *onc wllh tier quicknraa."
iiaid McNamara of (be aop h o -•
mote (hat waa called up from (he
Junior vdrally for the. (ournn»«rm !
iRnol agreat ohooter.
m rebound 11 ir «he
6a a ll over (b e court.
Sbe’f g d m g lo help ua a kri down
-llh.'road.
Mariner |H*3) w a » &gt; d by Ihi*
irto of Angela Krclg (31 polnta).
Laianya done* (14) and Leona

loum am enL w e played aome
good learn* and t.thing i f * really
g o i n g i d b c l b i i * . '* a a l d
McNamara. "B ut I don’t Ihlph
-w e'll be back next year. It’d
tough traveling back and forth

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u u h o g c 17*10 while the,
3*2 edge tn .corner .U d n
with four aavea.
...T y ^
By * i ' - « y

toumamept tirxt year. I want to

Tdayrttom cnla before hMfllme. Tam pa-tcto

the next 90 mlnuira. Lake Mary
ycd Ihe Jtwal defrnar la a good
i’* phtfoMPhy. atormlng the C CC goal
I M o . John Mart In .mapped the lie
r im h a naaa and. cutting from W1 to
•red a m or back to the k*ft poM at

Hr Pam 'keeper to

Not.

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the real of Ihb game (and
ui to all oul heto'a game
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ranm rM * '
r- def r nac tern the hey.” aald Mr*

Fontana mill ihe Oviedo drfonae and arorrrf
with 14:36 Irfl in thegame lo give Lema 1*0

abletomake theleadaland up.
O n Monday. Ovtedo atdlcrcd a 1*0 foaa lo

iy. aanfiwcifi. ticii

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�Sanford Herald. 8anford, Florida - Thursday. Dscsmbsr 31, 1092 - •$

People

i

Cookie sale starts Jan. 8
Girl Scouts will soon knock on doors to take orders

Htlpllnt offset stml-annual courts
The Central Florida Helpline Is ofTetlng Its semi-annual "H o w
to be a People Helper" course for teens and adults.' This is a
30-hour. 13*week college level course that special ires In the art
of helping peole.
Two sessions will be available each week. Morning classes
will be held from 9 a.m. to noon at Neighborhood Alliance
Church. Longwood, beginning Thursday. Jan. 38. Evening
classes are from 7 to 10 p.m. at Calvary Assembly of God,
Winter Park, beginning Monday, Jan. 37.
For Information, call Central Florida Helpline, 740-7408.

Substsncs shuts dlseusstd
SAFE, Substance Abuse Family Education, is conducting a
"Families In Crists" outreach program. Interested organisa­
tions wanting to contact the Life Savers Club of SAFE may call
Libby Kuharake a t391-43B7.

The 1993 Olrl Scout cookie sale Is about
to begin. Olrl Scouts throughout Central
Florida will be knocking on doors and
making phone calls as they take orders for
Olrl Scout cookies Friday, Jan. 8 through
Sunday, Jan. 24.
There are seven varieties of cookies
available, including Thin Mints, Peanut
Butter Patties, Shortbread, Peanut Butter
Sandwich. Caramel deLttes. Lemon Pastry
Cremes and Praline Royale. Olrl Seoul
cookies are made with top-quality Kosher
Ingredients and without artificial pre­
servatives or colors. They can be fro ten for
future enjoyment.

The theme of this girl's Olrl Scout cookie
sale la the protection of endangered and
threatened animal species. A s a part of Olrl
Scoutlng'a ongoing commitment to envi­
ronmental preservation. Cltrua Council of
Olrl Scouts is working to Increase public
awareness about endangered and threat­
ened animals. Girl Scouts are being en­
couraged to learn about harp seals, the
animal highlighted in the 1993 Girl Scout
cookie sale materials and the need for the
preservation of endangered animals. Girl
Scouts are working hard to Improve the
world around them.
Girt Scouts have been raising money with

t!

cookie sales for over 88 years. Girls use the
money earned by their troop during the
cookie sale for cam ping trips, equipment
and other troop program activities. Profits
earned by Cltrua Council provide funds for
maintaining and Improving camping pro­
perties, financial assistance for girls and
other Council operations.

s
Delivery of ordered cookies will be Feb. 12
through Feb. 28. Anyone wanting to buy
Girl Scout cookies can call Citrus Council of
Olrl Scouts. 407/048-1020 or 1-800-3673906. or visit Girl Scout cookie booths
throughout the community.

A V r u D I C I OTTwvVQ
The City of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:30 to 0:30 p.m.
Cost Is $3 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, board certified with over 10 years
experience.
Call 330-8897 for more details.
•

Ttaehtrt host opsn
houss for ffotlroos
Ssm ln ols County Rstlrsd
Educators Association hosted
a h o lid ay o p o n h o u s s at
Howell Place for ail teachers
who rstlrsd during the ytar.
8CREA officers on hand to
welcome the rstlrsd teachers
wsrs (from loft): Al Duxbury,
treasurer; Eliza Pringle, re­
c o r d i n g s s o r o t a r y ; R u th
Carlton, corresponding secre­
tary; Kathoryn Alexander, pres­
ident; and Waiter Curry, vice
president.

AKanongsthsrs
If you know, or live with an alcoholic, there Is help.
Al-anon Is an anonymous, non-profit organisation, open to
anyone who is a relative or friend o f an alcoholic.
Serenity W on Al-anon meets each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday. (Thursday non-smoking) evening at 8 p.m. Meetings
are held In the back room of the 8ahara Club. 3887 South
Sanford Ave., Sanford.
For additional meeting times and locations In the Central
Florida area, or for more Information, call 333-4123.

Omni Toastmasters gattwr
The Omni Toastmasters Club will gather at 8:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the Old Lake Mary City Hall, 188 Country Club
Rood, Lake Mary.
Call Sam Ryan a t671-2638 for more information.

HsraMMwteby

Colby L. M arwick received
practical work In military leadershp at the ROTC advanced
camp at Fort Bragg. Fayetteville.
N.C.
The camp, attended by cadets
normally between their third
and fourth year of college. In­
c lu d e s In stru ctio n In c o m ­
munications. management, and
survival training.
Successful completion of the
advanced camp and graduation
from college results in a com­
mission as a second lieutenant
In the U.S. Army Guard, or
Reserve.
The cadet (s a student at the
University of Central Florida.
Orlando.
Marwick Is the son o f Robert L.
Marwick and Gloria A. Q px of
8251 Wayside Drive. Sanford.

SANFORD E rn e st D.
Graham, son of Wilma Powell of
Sanford, has enlisted in the
Arm y's Delayed Entry Program,
according to Sgt. Samuel E.
D aw sey. S an ford R ecruiting
Station.
Graham, who will graduate
from Sem inole High School.
Sanford In June 1993. wlU enter
baste training July 7. 1993 hi
Fort Jackson. S.C.. followed by
advanced Individual training as
a uqlt level communtcatlniii
malntaincr at Fort Oordon. Oa.

O . L L O Y D III
R A M S T E I N AIR BASE.
Kaiserslautern. Germany — Air
Force Senior Airman Robert G.
Lloyd 111 has arrived for duty
here.
Lloyd, a security specialist. Is
the son of Robert and Virginia
Lloyd of 6712 Chaparral Drive.
Lewisville. N.C.
His wife. Sandra, la the daugh­
ter of Robert and Sharon Holkup
of Lake Mary.

O A R Y M . COSTA
Marine Private 1st Class Gary
M. Costa, a 1991 graduate of
Seminole High School. Sanford,
re c e n tly c o m p le te d re cru it
training and was meritoriously
promoted to his present rank.
During the training cycle al
Marine Corps Recruit Depot. San
Diego, recruits are taught the
basics o f battlefield survival,
m ilita ry d a lly ro u tin e an d
personal and professional stan­
dards.
All recruits participate in an
active physical conditioning
program and gain proficiency In
a variety of military skills ine lu d i n g first a(d. rifle
marksmanship and d ose order
d r ill. T e a m w o r k a n d s e lfd is c ip lin e a r e e m p h a s is e d
throughout the cycle.
He joined the Marine Corps In
June 1992.

New SCC leisure programs start
Leisure programs at Seminole Communi­
ty College announces that the following
courses will begin during the week of Jan.
B l l a 'I f T r l m / A « r « k l c a . — M o n daya/Wednesdays. 1/4*1/27. 7t 18*6:48 p.m.
Stressing safe and proper methods of
exercise, this course provides aerobics for
cardiovascular endurance, as well as stan­
ding and floor calisthenic exercises for
muscle strength and flexibility. Choreo­
graphed dances and "S te p " aerobics are a
part o f the program. Other exercise courses
are available on Tueadaya/Thuradaya. Coat:
$36/per person per 8 session course.
I — Mondays. 1/4-3/1, 7*10 p.m.

at Hunt Club. Designed to develop the
ability to understand, read and speak
fundamental Rptmfth daaUo g with everyday
situations. Participants w Sl be able to
converse In areas such as food. Uptc,
weather and travel. Another course is
offered a t t t e main cam pus cm Wednesdays.
Cost: $5Q/per person.
B a s k e tr y I — Tuesdays. 1/5-2/2.7*9 p.m.
T his course will tnarh the techniques for
weaving two traditional baskets: Twined
Bim M
basket and
Yarn basket.
Call for a list o f supplies needed. The reed
may be purchased from the Instructor If
preicrrca* u w i . t f u p e r p e n o n .
— Tuesdays,

1/5*2/16, 7*10 p.m. Designed to help those
who are contemplating divorce, moving
through the divorce process or who are
divorced. Participants will pcaettoa develop­
in g better person al an d Interpersonal
cxminunJcatioh skills, awareness dTftSUnjga
and responsibility* for their own Uvew Coat:
$25/per person.
i e t l e l D a— tn g/B &gt;glaalag — Tuesdays,
1/8-2/33.6-7:30 p.m. A n easy and eqjoyaote
learning method srtll give the b eginning
student a basic foundation In Fox Trot,
Walts. Swing and a Latin Dance. A variety
o f steps will be taught at a moderate pace,
ao each student can progress according to
his/her own ability. Cost: 838/per]

Year filled with highs, lows, hi and 'bye
t W hat a

y

e

a

r

th is h a s beent G e o rg e an d
Barbara are out. and
Hillary are f or First Dog Millie
will be replaced by First Cat

v
Folksy billionaire Rose Pebot
made a run at the presidency.
(Actually, be made two runs, but
w ho's counting?)
1993 waa a royal pain in the
throne for Q ueen Elisabeth.
Prince C h arles and Princess
Diana are bring apart in Hla and
Her castles; Prince Andrew and

Nelson and Winnie Mandela
separated In South Africa. Sex*
ologlsts Virginia Johnson and
5
|
S William Masters filed for divorce,
l
Ditto Barbara Walter* and Merv
J l H
----------------------Adelion. Lira (with a Z) Minnelli
A B M An
and Mark Oero are also kaput;

M
m

BUREN

VS
An
N bE uUri e n
v
u

le " h av e a lso p arted,
is Anne, 43. ended her
|e to Capt. Mark Phillips
n y 37-year-old Timothy
M * who QfKW ACTVed IS
other’s equerry (Mumsy
e 's delightrdf).
while, a w ing of Windsor
caught Ore (no Insurance?
Ungf).
king a t flames, there was
hot In Los Angeles; and
earthquakes, tornadoes,
c eruptions and famine

M

/ 3S.SS?-TSt

Lunden to pay her ex $18,000 a
month In temporary alimony.
Hotel Queen Leona Helmaley
la doing a stretch In the "b ig
h o u se". for tax fraud and for
“ creative bookkeeping." (Even
Alan Dershowltx couldn't save
her 1
C oun try and w estern star
Oarth Brooks became a father,
W h it n e y H o u s t o n m a r r ie d
Bobby Brown (both Gram m y
w in n e rs ). Pop sin g e r P a u la
Abdul wed actor Emilio Bstevex.
Sen. Ted Kennedy married at*
torney Victoria Reggie; his ex.
Joan, published a book on how

from California: British comedi­
an Benny HUl; Wal-Mart'a Sam
Walton, listed in Forbes — the
richest man In America: child
p sy c h o lo g is t D r. L ee S a lk :
California's senator and former
song and dance man Oeorge
Murphy; the legendary Marlene
Dietrich; T V star Chuck Connors
(" t h e R ifle m a n "); O erm an
C hancellor W illy Brandt; Paul
Henretd, w ho played one of the
leads In " C asab la n c a "; Eric
Sevareld. Journalist-broadcaster,
whose career spanned live de­
cades and five continents.
Outgoing President Bush or­
dered U J . troops and food to
S o m a lia aa a h um an itarian
gesture.
Pray for peace, a n d good
health for President-elect CUnton
and Vice President-elect Gore.

•in )iaie «*M tS ir

Tammy Fa;
~iv **

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 31, 1992
f f — Apjirtm «nts
U nfum ishtd / Rent

71— H tip W antad

C LA S S IF IE D A D S

IN T M I CIR CU IT COURT
OF T U B I IO H T E IN T H
JU D IC IA L CIR CUIT.
S E M IN O L IC O U N TY ,
FLORIDA.
CASK NO.i 41-1M4-CA-14-A
IN R E: F O R FE ITU R E OF
1*W HONDA ACCORD
V IN : SMJ3W4403
RULE TO SNOW C A U IE WHY
PR O PER TY SHOULD NO T BE
F O R F E ITE D
T O : Daniel Mortenson
JJJO Bougainvlikta Drive
Winter Perk, Florid, 33743
YOU ARE H ER EB Y COM
AAANOEO to show cause why
Ihot cortoln proprrty dttcrlbod
as: 1400 Hondo Accord. VIN:
SMJ10I4403 thould not bo
fortoINd to tho m o el or tale by
tho Semi nolo County Sheriff'*
Office ot Seminole County, Flor­
ida, the agtncy that salted told
property on January IT, Ittl, In
Seminole County, Florida.
YOU SHALL FILE AN A N ­
SWER to the Complaint tor Rule
to Show Caute and Final Order
of Forfeiture, Hating any De­
tente* you may have to the
forfeiture of the above described

Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

631-9993

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
MiDBRBBBNUdBtRNG — __ SfialfM
fcMAJL-*»PJI. 7 oeneeowUvoKnot__-- TOiBRnB
MONDAY U n
• a ORnBGBUBVBttHMB— __«1 m Rrb
tl.llllRB
HNOAY
1
axa atabet Mut, baSbE bp ainoB
CLOSED SATURDAY
*a U r n M M
A SUNDAY
NOWACCEPTNG
“

“

“

cw

m

a HR

S D H

ELECTRICIAN
Lie. Retldentlal Journeyman
Electlclan* need only apply.
Sonterd Electric.........171IM3

Exp. Cooks
Cheerleader-Type
Sonars
Apply In Person: CratyWIng*.
ISMS French U0 1ITS

Exp. Electronic Tech
Or StrBwfewf CarisBfldjL
Highly motivated Technician
ar Engineer with a minimum
ol 3 yrt. experience In Scat
and Installation. Call ICRS

Mutl have own tool* and
transportation 407 S&gt;0 3004
HAPPY ELVES CtilMcaro Ctr..
Lake Mary needs organlred
Experienced Care-giver. Al
ternoon hours. 171 7Sir

HttdtlHftt /AiSSJ
Non smoker Must have car
Reference*. Serious minded
and responsible only. 373 MM

LAWN MAINTENANCE
Must have ] yr* COMMER
CIAL exp. A transportation
Turf Masters.............. MO i*ai

12— Efdariy Cart

TCMIITITCCHNICIAII
Experienced p filtrrtd. Call
IT ) 0047 or M l l i t )

Vstsfiitan Rm

m

A MOVE IN SPECIAL YOU
W ON'T B E L IE V E I Geneva
Q o r d s n s A p U . l T T j O W ______

I fttM ta t

Responsible per ion to cere for
animal* and facility. Average
X hour* per week. Apply:
n u w . nth St, Soelerd
WAREHOUSE AND OENBRAL
LABOR H E L P N B B O B O I
Bonut lor driver*. All (hltt*
available. Dally pay, no tee.
Report ready to work S:M am,
Industrial L:.bor Svc.. 1011
French Av. No phone call*
41 W O R K ER S N B E D E D It t
D AILY WORK, O AILY PAY)
Report at *AM: 1100 S. French
_____
Av*. Santord

A FFO R D A U C IO U S R EN TS

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

07 A 1 Bdrm. Townhomes
0 Sparkling Pool
OE idling Clubhouse
0 Large Eal In Kitchens
O Self Cleaning Ovens
OWashers/Qrytrs Available

I T f T t o W . I SthST.

1*0**. Phono dep.131-31*3
SANFORD, reamata to share
expenses. M/F. Lg. bdrm.
w/prlvate bath Incl. T V ,
phone, lull house prlv. 170/wk
plM 171 util, and sacurlly.
______ Call Ml MIS_________

SANFORD
7 bdrm.
complete privacy. 1 block
from new hospital. SI 10 per
week plM *750 security.
Call 771 7744

EXPENSIVE
APARTMENTS?

M s r Crstk Apartments
WAY! 1I4-4JJ4

street parting M&gt; 44t&gt;

101— Houses

Furnished/ Rent

CHARMINO and convenient I
and 7 bdrm apis. SJOO-mo
plM deposit. Cal HT4 4301
CLEAN I bdrm apt., upstairs,
private, w/flreplace. STSO'mo
17? SO*
plus deposit
LAKE JE N N IE APARTMENTS
Roomy aparlmonlsl Free
water, tree gas CallHt-MTS

DOWNTOWN Lh. Mary •Cory 7
bdrm. t bath. 1410/mo. plus
dspetlt. Call 371 4M7________ .
GOV ER NMEN T RESALE •
SIS,SCO MOO down. Adorable )
bdrm. with new root. Call
Alynne today! 774 7147. The
Hllllman Group. ]5f S477
OROVEVIEW 3 bdrm . 3 bath.
New carpet A paint. Family
r m „ appliances, garage.
UlO/mo. SANFORD 3 bdrm.
1bath, fenced, carpeted. S471 ..
Caldwell Realty Svc, 7*017*4
NICE 3 bdrm. I bath.' tentral
H/A. lg. fenced yard. SMO/mo.
plus security Call 331 MM
RE NT OR LEASE/OPTKM •44and/Weklva River. 7/7 mobile
w/edditton on I ♦ acre. Horse
OK.S771/mo 444 1441_________
SALE OR LEASE! Great 5/1 ‘
w/pool. S acres! B SI
Realty. 777-«317/774-44dt

Stenstrom R tfitih

I M IN COMPANION
71 days/wk. Good pay. TLC
Homo Companions. X I 10*1

MIOiCAL RECEPTIONIST

Free medical care, transpor
tation, counseling, private
doctor plM living oiponto*.
Bar &gt;717111 Call Attorney John

Victim Advocate In Criminal
Justice system. Degree or
Eaperlence required Send
resume to: Blind Boa JO.
Santord Herald. PO Boa IM7.
laniard. FI. 11773 54*7

For busy orthopedic others
Call Sharon. 747 1511

MOVE U P Ta Management!
Restaurant A Retail. Man
agament Job*. t )!K start.
Fee. EEC Mgmnt. See 0071

NICE large 7 bdrm. } bath,
cenlral H/A. wather/dryer
hook ups, M l 5/mo plus securl
ty. Hall Realty. 131 5774
PARK AVE.. attic lency. only
StH/mo plM *50 util. Near

.EMPLOYMENT

i 323-5176

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
OP T H E E IO H TE E N TH
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT.
SEM IN O LECO U N TY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. i *M**4-CJk-1*-B
IN R E : F O R FE ITU R E OP
IMS NISSAN MOZX
VIN: JNIHZUUFXOSM
RULE T O SHOW CAUSE W H Y
PROPERTY SHOULD N O T
F O R F E ITE D
TO : Kimberly O. Plgna
TtW A Shoels Drive
Orlando, Florida M I T
YOU ARE H E R E B Y COM­
M ANDED to thaw caue* Why
that certain praparty dseertbad
at: HES Nissan M ZX, V IN :
JN IH ZM U FX M M Wwwtd not ba
fartattad to tha u*o of or aala By
tho Samlnal, County ShartfTs
Office of l emlnele County, Flor­
ida, the agoncy that Mtwd d*M
propsrft an March 14, t m . In

Electronic A Appliance Expe
rlence Required. Full time.
Salary plus commission.
Room lor advancement, ma
|or madical benefit*. Apply In
’T a RMERS FU R N ITU R E
IMSS. French Ave.. Santord

SANFORD
I bedroom apt,
complete privacy. Excellent
areal M l per week plus SJOO
Mcurlty. Call 111 T14t________

SANFORD
I room afllclency
plM pYlvat* bath Complete
privacy. 17} per week plus
(ISO security includes utilities
Call M l 774*

KIWANIS CLUB OF CASSELBERRY

wmiiww vvuiiii, rifniWs
Call Pale Myers al J77 4741

1 stto tal s m o k e f r e e bin g o
FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT

lylCallSH-TSU
Dynamic Mil starter needed
lor comprehensive implant
and reconstructive practice.
Strong general dental and
surgical background a mutt.
Avail«bI* --—
J ig - --4. Salary
a, and
,

■PWfiTi vPTwiwnwwn with
•■Mflancg. H I l i R n

vldual, with strong dental
background, tor comprohon
» l v e s u r g i c a l a n d ra
constructive practice.
Schoduellng. Insurance, II
nanciats. and patient rolatlen*
* wi th a ip a rlo n ca
DOf 004-TTS-QM

Stenstrom Realty, Inc.
Prspsitl Mgmt. Jim Oeyle
7717441 Alter 1PM 1 1141*41

BINGO

Security O ffictrs

YOU. SHALL P ILE AN AN­
SWER la Hw Complaint Wr Rule

SANFORD Lg quiet 1 bdrm
apt. Central H/A. carport,
tllSplMdeposit. References.

Part lima, days, nights and
weakands. Exp In military
police, law enforcement or
basic security helplul. Clast 0
or temporary license re
qulred Apply In person al
Flea World Security Depi.
Irom Thurs Sunday, SAM
JPM.Hwy I7W. Santord.
Ask for Rarpo*. *44 7117

T E A C H E R S • 1 Pr o Kin
dergartan. lull lime and I part
time permananent tor otternoon care. M F. Exp necet
tary. Must ba neat and ergo
nliod. MS * to or 111-0*11

ALL REGULAR GAMES PAY $50 EACH
$100 • $200 • $250 JACKPOTS AND

TW O WINNER-SPLITS
IRY FRIDAY EARLY BIRDS AT 6 PM
CASSELBERRY SENIOR CENTER
200 N. LAKE TRIPLET DRIVE
SECRET LAKE PARK • CASSELBERRY, PL

STARTING FRIDAY 8 JANUARY 1993

or cortlflbd. Occupational
Llcanaos are rogulrod by tha
county and can ba verified by
calllnagiM»U.a«t.7SI0

tacratarialt

oEzai

SAM 7PM. RoasenalHe rates.
Experienced. » * W

RVNIJ

I O f I I ON M
TOVKL

I T I O

OOAIX

04

I I N N 1 N

XX

f

■ • • • *

e 4O1

FREE

696-5188

A O C A R R I I R S . a wal l
established and growing
control Florida hated cam
pony odors you:
Je|
o Soml Annual Pay Incroosos
o Stop Ott Pay
O Unloading Pay
O Vacation Pay
O Solely Bonus
O Spouse Riding Program

*4X0

h all

B ig jC a s h J a c k p o t s

S M O K E

NOTICE OF IN T E N T
TO REGISTER
FIC TITIO U S NAM E
Pursuant ta tho Chapter
H I M . Florida SI*lute* (l« H ).
Edward DesJardins give* netIce
that ha Inlands to engage In
business a* New World Aviaries
and that ha will register tamo
with the Department of Stale.
Dated this December It, Ittl.
MartinC.Boire. Esquire
PO Drawer ITS
OeLand. FL H77IOS7S •
Attorney far Registrant
Publish: Oocomhar I I , tdft

07/7 Plnarids* Cleb. pool,
tennis cl., all appl*. wash
dryer. S171 mo 1700 sec
OSANPORO
l/l duplex
w/llvlng rm. porch, new paint,
blinds. Iltl/mo. 1700 tec
0 SANFORD. 3/1 dupNx. with
garage. CHA, lg rm*. lira
storage. 1440mo « 1300tec.
O S A N P O R O . 3/3 Duplea
w/Garege. u rn. patio. CHA.
all appls MM mo salOtac.
O O E B A R V , 7/1 w/carport.
workshop, tern porch. CHA.
lg.yd.1440 mo 1150 tec
OLK. MARY, 3/1 w/carport.
outside storage, comer lot.
New paint A carpet. Clean
*400 mo *400 tec
O M A V F A I R V I L L A S . 7/7.
Private! dbl. garage, all
a p p lt ..o u t s id e polio
w/prlvacy. lg. rm*. S17S mo
1500 Sec

above-styled coooo. in tho
C irc u it C ourt of Bomlnoto

VO

!UI IiM H I I N 1 Aaoair
Free gtek
0132*

41

4X0

idsofhome
fOROtrS. ROMtOR * ceramic
ut tm

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if:

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florldo - Thursday, Daeember 31, 1992 141— Homos for Safe
WE MAN AO E nearly 400 rental
home* In Samlnot* County I
CAUL US FI A IT I
HP R E A LTY , m iOOS
W IN TER IP R IN O I
704 I.
Edgemon Av*. Qultl 1 bdrm, I
bath. fenced, central H/A.
garago* 1408/mo, W M il
J ROAM , t R ATH. Suntond
Eilat*!. Control H/A, t*nc*d
backyard. UM/mo til, tail
anddamoqodepotll. M l I0M

105— Duplex*
Triplex/Rent
LAKE MARY
Ilf E. Lake
Mary Av*. Modern 1 bdrm. 1
bath duplet. Volume calling!,
font, hookupt Trees, very
private, setl/mo 7a? 0110 or
h i quo ____________________
LAKE MARY. 7 bdrm., w/w
carpel. C H /A . colling font,
lanced yd, good area. On I f
L O V E L Y madam t/t, good
neighborhood. Affordable,

tern porth .Q U IE T U S -W I

K IT *N' CARLYLE® by Lorry Wright

O IN IV A Cut* 1 bdrm. I bath
ta&gt; town, tiled family room,
n»w raot/carpet, *44,100
t t iO lU T . ltevom*!!ap*
O o v ’ t Forocfoiuro*. A*
p o i/ A n u m a No Q u a lity
Homotl Ownar financing.

221-Cars
tMIUPNTWEim

• M M K IM E S IM IIIIR
Call In your garago tat* ad by
Tl naan an Tuaeday and toko
advantage of our spoelal
garago tot* ad prkell Call
Claasifiad now lor detaltit

Seminal*. Orange, Votutla.
laniard ton than IM M down
• Ptnatrail renovatad. carpal,
appliance!, lancad yd.S4t.f00
a Renovated Ilk* new 3/1. tplc .
appi.. naw paint. tsa.MM
• Faat Hem*l In cul d* iac.l/|.
renovated. Oarag*. Set.fOO
*1/1 ** &lt;i acre. 1700 tq. If, tplc,
appi, deadend Ureal tit.000

217— Oarato Safes
C O U N T R Y AIN F L I A
M A R K IT - In Genova. Comer
of SR 4M A 44. 1/14/11 from
1 AM-SPM. For booth rooorv*
tloMcafl 14S-II1S.

NCNtteSM Homos S4V 7M
♦ Land. All illawork Inti
Build on your tot or any lot In
Samlnol* Co. Superior quality.
1 X 4 wallt. dbl payn* win
dowi. Model open Hwy t l
Poland Colt......1104) STM***

to Eat
NAVRL ORA NOES. Rad Grapafrutt, U plefc-We pick. Opart
Dally. Mer (weather Farm*.
1441 CalarvAva-CR 411.
SW EET FtN E A F F L E Oranges!
OntySlObuehall
Cell M llllS

tn The Co entry I ]/i brick hom*
on 1/1 acre, new paint and
carpet, fenced yard Sf f.SOO

STE N S TR O M

fS a S a B B S

Mfc list and scN
more property Iben
anyone in the Greater
Santord/labe Mary area.
# W O N O ER FU L HOME on
' rg* Ireed loti
From rm.
.• Ilroploce, oat in kitchon.
umlng rm. C/H/A. Terraced
decking! l/t'i.sai.Mo

D U P L E X ON HW Y 44
1
t tor lei. f bdrm. uptfeln. 1
down I Zoned commercial!
Owner will (Inane* with STA00
dawn............................ Set.fOO
APPQRPABLEI
Only *1,770
down to quollllad buyerl
Sltl/mo P ITI, I S Intereit lor
X y n 1 bdrm.. control H/A

m -r m

• R U lix CIN TUR Y • I N I .
out*. PS, A / C run* good.
Aabing SIAM J t t t i u r m v u
CADILLAC RROUONAM - ’«/,
over I00A00 mile*, nice car,
s a uamjRt.swLtAm
R.Vf
RSAAAI RVr'Mrlfrf
• C H IV Y CORVRTTC, 74, T top4, leadad, Rood condition.
*4.100.
M 1 H 04
.
• FO R O TN U N O IR R IR O . T170.
Rum goad, H vinyl top-Noodt
Hr#*. ONLY *7*0. 0 1 -MM
1 JA M M R X J4 - 71, dart groan
unsafe iloalbaa
wiifi
f u m r m iirw r, puuu
condition. 04A H 407-410- H U
O LINCOLN TOWWCAR • 1171.
o r i gi na l ownar , copper
metallic, leather Interior,
M.WO M I-1004

a FORD ARROSTAR X L T. 01,

AND Nbirry Sa w Y M r 11U
HooisCrewaPowa.......JS M M 4
• A t A i l with «s m t csrtrMfeto
mgeeaOHteeee*#**■#»****»»*»«*4**JJ2*M04
• f 6 « D PR OCESSOR plus
Wonder, GE. Ilk* now, with
boob. Cost StlT, tell lor SJ0
ORO Call (OAM-IPM. H P 1040
J A C U Z Z I . Mots 4, Maraan
• M U S T A N O L X *.». 111*,
morWitR* auto timer♦ lots,
black. Nadodl Sunroof, Ford
w/wood cab-StMO. ORO lab*
ramoN entry and bra. Imoa ymonti/caah. MS-1010
maculate t OMM Con MMfOf
a ROW IN * MACHINE • Saar*
Llftstylar MOO, H U nawl
PLYM OUTH R E LIA N T - '04, 4
Make! o m t c Im funl Naw,
•E# Mpby gi^gi •lE#
SIMaafl N r STS. MS-4M0
tlrtt. m t CmCrgiy. M -S 441
PURLtC A U TO AVC T &gt;ON e
TON IN * T ARLES (7) ■Sunfana, *
EV ER Y FR ID AY 7iN PM
ooayoMrdio.... ............-SUOO
Call 141-040
DAYTONA A U TO AUCTION
INry. It , OoySino Roocb
U N IO S n T ^ A N tP O R T A R L E
1*4-04*111
r C « t l U L A R CAR PWONR.
• IM O R O 104-101-4714 pr
IM F IN*

Accesssriee

R€ A L T Y, I N C .

•AFFMOARLt'ADORARLEI
Your very own 1/1 cottage
w/llvlng, dining, lamlly
ro o m i, eel In kitchen.
Whjttlln1cleant SX.00C

223-Aiffe Parts

M f / P O | M Br v r
Coma/Cotllilen-hitl tsv. ovwll.
ECONOM YINSURAHCI

SOSS.NWV.ITdt.

221—
Good
lM t
m
mV V
W l i Th
i RRRRR^w

223— Miscoilanaous

FR EE1ER . FLUS Waroboeie.
walk In Ire*rer. S,aao SO. FT.
rot Cornwall Rd. Sanford.
m -eatt oib tor Elmer Smtm
LONOWOOD/LK. MARY area,
i .000 1.400 iq. It, with or
without A/C officer k ill SIX)
MclntO*h Point. MIASM

CsirtMv UsedCm, 222*2121
* *MTT0 im m m k * ★

222*2111

Atlanta NaQaalittat I
#1/1 an 1/1acral Fenced, cutd*
tac. dead and lira*!. 144.000
Additional home* avail. Lett
than U K down I

Lb. Mary cut tom built 1/1,1 car
garage. Llv. din, lam. rm*.
Fireplace, tec. tyttem. SOS.MO
Lb. Mary renovated Ilk* new
1/1, garage, fenced yd. *11.M0

Cacapl taa, tag, ml*, ole.
t*0t MITSURISMI - 4 doer,
auto, a ir, storoo. ONLY
1141.41 aor month 1
Coll Mr. Payn*

opts./cendoi, Castolberry
ama. Must tell I lacrinct.

n u en m m

• JUST LIITBDI Cute 1/1 In
nice neighborhood With aat In
kitchen, big fenced yd. and
morel..........................Stl.fOO

23S— Antfevo/Ciassic
Cars

C KCggt tftL tgg« tlttti itc.
If llO C L T A « ROYAL - Auto.
giro Tot* WTIgtle CTUrlfi pPWwr
windows, olr bag, power
lock*. AM-FM casooHo, roar
dofroot. ONLY SM0.il par
month............. Call Mr. Payne

•RUICN L E IA R R I CLASSIC 1044, run* oaad. SHOOORO
Call M I-7454
•OUICN SKYLARK • 1*44. 1
R iM jjR R M V ^ n jM FNrtd#

AMANY OPPORTUNITIES lor
small buslnm l Rear yard
accetll Formal dining rm,
' tronl rm. Ilroplaco, hardwood
M a o r i . O n l y S 41. 0 0 0 I

•OS CHCVY canw H M t.. V-R,
P.O., mbtar root, tompliN
car. floods raotoratNn. SIM M

oMjomooa.woMA.JRy,
D A Y R IO RfN ITR Iran a

o M R T R tK I, 04 RM H I, rum

141— Racraaffenal
V R h k lt s / C * m p r s
OOVRRLANO RUS ■ST. 14 ft..

CmrtmrlM Can, 222-2122

mint condition, LOADED. UK
ml. I

•1SRI TERRY M R.

TO YO TA T R R C I L 11, 4 dr.,
ottlo. PS, AC Ulvor grey.

w/ naming

tt*n.SIIAS0.S04-« M t ll

We Don't M eet The Competition

We SVlake St!

Spactot. 1141/mo. M U M
SANFORD. Off lea tpaca. MOO
sq. It. nullding total. 1100 aq.

jfj*fo M je*w d tjji;l j l ^ ^

SSA00 down. 041441/me. N r 10
y n . 1 bdrm. 1 bam. C/H/A,
parage. S41AOOM l 4741
SANFORD SLOOO plus doling
move! you tail Owner (inane
Sanaa

N I C E C O N O O . w/appls. i
wath dryer, Flnerldgo Club
Root, rent + dep. M l-1144

*

k a la M

e u a a la la lu

( &gt; t ih v y

M a A g a i

1BCBB3357

-«p r

A n d O ur Special Offer
Will H ave You Laughing
All The W ay To The Bank.
a /
I *»t M ft iiI tv H tm t On
All ?. HfMlrmiin A B .ilh Apt:*

h
i

meat*
Newly Renovated!
tM O WOQCWOOO A V I* tANPOHO

t j
4^

w— WV ■

*

uPSSwSwww

Check List
✓ Newly remodeled apts.
✓ O ne and two bedroom
✓ Ask about our 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 month leases
✓ Close to mqjor hwys.
and thwougfrferes
2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

J 2\

C A R S

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Is fhere a cure for
husband’s snoring?

USE YOUR
IMAGINATION/
BE CREATIVE/

UlMATDOHOU

\

MEAN, WE'RE
V*«
ALL OUT OF
ITS
HORS P'OEWRES?^*,

m yQ UL AIOD 1 HAV£
6£EI0 GOIAJQOUT FOR
SEARS...

AMD ST(UL ALL SHE
EVER TALKS ABOUT IS
her

itocxm xxk xt

I fA 6E 6IM M U 6 *)T H fW K

IM QOIK}S TOm jt TO
TMTSRUEfX* fMOUR
RELATIOU5HIP
&gt;

DEAR DR. GOTT: My husband
and 1are newlyweds with a sleep
problem. He's a snorer and I'm a
light sleeper. The only way w e
can get a good night’s sleep Is In
different rooms.
W e've read about a tiny plastic
clip manufactured In Sweden
called the Noxovent. designed to
widen the air passages. The
plastic clip is 2 1/2 Inches long,
shaped like a d ouble-ended
canoe paddle. The snorer bends
the device In the middle and
■ticks the ends up both nostrils.
The product Is not available In
the United States, but I would
like your opinion before Invest Iga ting further.
DEAR READER: I'm not famUlar with the product you describe. I think your husband
would obtain more appropriate
relief If he were to see an
ear-nose-and-throat specialist,
because snoring In a young
person can be due to blockage o f
the upper airway during sleep.
The EN T specialist can advise
him whether, far example, he
needs surgery to remove polyps
or other causes of obstruction.
DEAR DR. GOTT: My husband
has a high cholesterol level, and
we have a question about cookIng oil. I'm under the Impression
that the higher ratio of unsatu­
rated fat to the saturated fat Is
best. He feels the reverse Is
better. W ho's right?
DEAR READER: You're cor­
rect. The higher the unsaturatcd
fat. the better. Saturated fats
(those which are solid at room
temperature) have been associ­
ated with health risks, such as
heart disease. Therefore, anyone
with high cholesterol levels
should be on a low saturated-fat
diet.
,
DEAR DR. GOTT: 1 suffer from
dally headaches. An MRI and C T
scan both confirmed a large
encapsulated cyst In the right
maxillary sinus. An operation
actually found this to be a large
polyp that wasn't removable by
that surgical procedure, but the

J ia . 1 . 1993
In" the year ahead the more
knowledgeable you become in
your chosen field o f endeavor,
the greater your probability for
success. Prepare yourself pro­
perly for the opportunities that
could be forthcoming.
CA PR IC O R N (Dec. 22&gt;Jan.
IB) This Is one of those days
where you might unintentionally
take out your frustrations on
people for whom you care the
most. Don't shift the blame on
the Innocent. Get a Jump on life
by understanding the Influences
which are governing you In the
year ahead. Send for Capricorn's
Astro-Graph predictions today
by mailing 31.25 plus a long,
self-addressed, stam ped
envelope to Astro-Graph, d o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
AQ UAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
P e o p l e w h o m y o u ' l l have'
dealings with today will be able
to perceive your motives easily.
Don't use flattery, subterfuge or
Insincerity to make your point.

n or to tMT. HAm M I H totrt
V AtOUT

The old year Is drawing to a
close. W e are all wondering how
the new president will mold the
country during the next four
years. At the b rid g e table,
though. 1suggest we concentrate
on counting and on treating our
partners kindly.
On today's deal. West was
Pierre Jals. a winner of all three
world titles: the Bermuda Bowl
In 1956, the Team Olympiad in
1980 and the Open Pairs In
1962.
Deciding to bid tactically. Jals
passed as dealer. Then, over
South 's strong and artificial
opening that poked for aces, he
leapt to five clubs. North's five
no-trump showed two aces.
Jals decided there was only
one way to defeat six diamonds.
He led the club Tour. East, the
perfect partner, produced the 10.
Jals sat back contentedly, sure

t

PETER
GOTT.M.D

sinus opening w as enlarged to
p r o v id e b e tte r d r a in a g e . I
thought this was the answer to
my headache dilemma yet the
problem persists. W here do I go
horn here?
D EAR READER: Headaches
can be caused by sinus polyps,
even If the sinuses appear to
drain normally. Return to your
otolaryngologist for advice about

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distinguishing between people
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22) People
you should treat generously and who are subject to your author!those you should not. Unfortu- ty today will require sklllTuI
nately. your Judgment may be management. If you don't In­
faulty.___
spire them properly, they won't
ARISE (March 21-Aprll 19) respond to your directives.
Thert Is a possibility today that
V IR O O (A u g. 23-Sept. 22)
you may cater to an Individual
Forego making demands today
you'll think can do you some of the one you love that,
the
good, while barely acknowledge roles were reversed, you would
Ing a loyal ally who has helped
resent and Ignore. Try to consldybu previously and can help you e r th in g s from h is or her
now.
perspective.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20) Be
L IB R A (S ept. 23-Oct. 231
cautious today o f becom ing strive to be a bit more alfccromantically fascinated by a
tlonate than usual today towards
person who has already made a
your mate. If he or she Is In a
commitment. You could be ask- grum py moodi this Is the elixir
Ing for trouble If you trespass In that could soothe frayed nerves,
forbidden areas.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
QEMUVI (M ay 21-June 20) (ndustrtousness. not apathy. Is
Treat business endeavors
required today If you hope to
seriously today, even when you
have something worthwhile to
are Involved with friends you show how you spent your time,
know on a social basis. Make Don't use excuses to neglect
sure the demarcation line Is your duties,
acknowledged.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
C A N C E R (June 21-July 22) 21) Self-discipline Is required at
Today .you might find com pathis Ume where the managenlons are only partially In accord
ment o f your resources is conwith your purposes and ob* ccm cd. An additional dosage
Jectlves. They will be even less . might be necessary for handling
enchanted If you attempt to .other people’s money.

ir

that East would return a heart
for him to ruff. But nothing was
happening. Eventually. Jals told
East it w as his lead. He asked to
see the previous trick. Then he
led back — the club five. South
ruffed and claimed.
*■
Jals knew there w as no point
In berating his partner. Instead,
he has allowed East to retain
anonymity.
.
A young expert once tried this
leading coup In England. Sud­
denly there w as a gust of wind,
blowing dum m y's cards onto the
floor. After they had been picked
up. the y.e.'s partner, a worldclass player, led back the right
suit at trick two and the y.e.
ruffed. The y.e. was surprised
his partner didn't say anything.
Afterward, he asked his partner
why he hadn't complimented
him on the lead.
"Y o u didn't see which card 1
played to 'w in' trick one."

EAST

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                    <text>W ED N ESD A Y

D e c e m b e r 30 , 1 9 9 2

SanfordHerald
Serving Sanford, Lako Mary and Seminole County alnoa 1908
85th Year. No. 108 - 8anford. Florida

NEWS DIGEST

Billups harassed?

Ex-football player charged with rape
says women annoying him by phone

□ Sports

Rams, ’Hounds advance
ORLANDO — T h e Lake Mary a n d Lym an high
school b o y s’ so c ce r learns advanced to to d ay 's
sem ifin als in Ihe Plzzn Ihii Invitational.
See Page IB .

□ Pooplo

Try soul food for new year
After e a tin g a variety of rich foods d uring the
holidays, sim p le food m uy taste good for a
c h a n g e. B ernice B aker s h a re s recipes w ith
read ers for a u th e n tic soul food us the new year
a p p ro ach es.
See Page 3 B

Minor injuries in auto accident
SANFORD — An a u to uccfdcitt ended In
extensive d u m ugc to tw o vehicles hut only
m inor In ju ries to th e d riv ers Involved.
A ccording to a sp okesm an for the Sanford
Police D e p a rtm e n t. Ihe accident occurcd at
about 9 lust e v e n in g ut th e cu rv e w here U.S.
H ighw ay 17-92 a n d Sem inole Boulevard Join on
l lie sh o re s of L ake Monroe.
T he police rep o rt s ta te s thul w hen the c ar
driven by M aurice T errell. 18. of 2501 Byrd St.
In S anford, failed to yield th e right of way to un
o n co m in g v e h ic le driven by J a m e s Marks. 42. of
224 E. F ern Dr. in Sanford, th e vehicles collided.
B oth w ere ta k e n to HCA C entral Florida
Regional llo sp ltu l. treuted to m in o r injuries and
released a sh o rt tim e luter. according to S u san
P ruther. h o sp ita l spokesm an.
T h e a c cid e n t report prepured by the police
d e p a rtm e n t in d ic a te s that Terrell was traveling
c a stb o u n d on S em inole Boulevard, enterin g the
c u rv e, w h e n h e fulled to yield to Marks, who w as
e n te r in g th e c u rv e from n o rth b o u n d U.S.
H ighw ay 17-92. T errell, th e report said, struck
M ark's cur In th e left rear q u a rte r panel, euuslng
ex ten siv e dum ugc.
Police said th a t Terrell w as charged with
falling to y c lld th e right of way.

Bath benefits Good Sam
HEATHROW — A New Y eur's Eve Bowl Bash
will be held o n ' Lake Mary Boulevard (ucross
from H eathrow ) T h u rsd ay from 1 p.m . until
1:30 a .m . All p ro ceed s from th e event will go to
th e Good S a m a rita n Hom e. Inc.
T h ere will be carn iv al rides, live bands, prize
giveaw ays a n d celebrity a p p earan ces ul Ihe
event.
T ick ets a rc 8 1 0 in ad v an ce a n d 812 the day or
the ev en t. C h ild re n u n d e r 12 arc free. More
Inform ation cun be obtained by calling Rick or
Dawn a t 8 3 4 -3 7 5 5 .

By VICK I DoSORMIBfl
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — SherlfTs departm ent reports show that
Lewis Billups, charged earlier tills m onth with raping a
Lougwond w om an and then trying to blackm ail her.
say s that he Is being harassed by two wom en, one ol
w hom is try in g to get m oney from Idm.
His a tto rn ey said Oils m orning that he wishes the
s h e rllf s dep artm en t to press on wllh their Investigation
of the calls a s he believes It will have some bearing on
(he ease Involving charges against Billups.
"W e 're looking Into It.” said George Proeeliel. public
inform ation officer lor the departm ent said. "But so lur
there Is no o ther Inform ation."
T h e form er pro football eornerbaek who played for

LOS ANGELES — T he late Dalton Trum bo.
b la c k lis te d d u r in g th e M cC arthy era. hus
officially b e e n given th e 1953 A cadem y Award
for h is sc re e n p la y for "R om an H oliday."
T he A c a d e m y of Motion Picture Arts an d
S c ie n c e s a n n o u n c e d T u e s d a y th a t It w as
a m e n d in g Its rec o rd s to show T rum bo us
w inning th e O scar.
T ru m b o . u n a b le to find w ork in the 1950s
d uring th e an tl-C o m m u n ist furor, had enlisted
fellow s c re e n w rite r Ian M cClellan H unter to act
as h is " fr o n t." a n d it w as H u n te r w ho w as
received th e A cad em y Aw ard.
T ru m b o ’s w idow . Cleo. will be given the O scar
in May a t a sc re e n in g o f th e film , w hich starred
A udrey H e p b u rn .
T ru m b o a lso received a n O scar in 1956 for
"T h e B rave O n e ." w ritten u n d e r th e pseudonym
Robert Rich. T h e ac ad e m y p resen ted T rum bo
w ith u tro p h y for th a t film In 1975. a year before
h is d eath.

□ S e e B illu p s , Page BA

L tw ls Billups

Boulevard
contractor
selected

Child
killer’s
release
nixed

By NICK PPKIPAUP
Herald Staff Writor

LAKE MARY - Work on the
s ta l le d L u k e M ary B o u le v a rd
w idening project Is expected to
resum e within a few weeks. The
final com pletion dale of J u n e 14.
1993 Is still cx|H-clcd.
According to Sem inole County
Attorney Bob McMillan. "T he lx&gt;iiding com pany has mm- selected the
highest bidder for the project. The
agreem ent culls for the Job to In­
com pletely finished by the sam e
date as originally set up when lluwork first begun."
T he nam e of Ihe new contractor
h as not been announced.
' ‘ According lb Sem inole County
Munugcr Ron Kubun. "W e have
received no formal notification re­
garding Ihe Identity of the low
bidder." He continued. "D ue lo the
Interruptions of the holiday seusan,
Ihe handing com pany hus th u s far
been unable In com plete negotia­
tions with the low- bidder."

By NICK PPKIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer__________

Donald McDougall will not
walk free on New Year's Eve.
His re le a se sch ed u led for
to m o rro w w as thw arted In­
s ta te S en ato r G ary Siegel. RA l t a m o n te S p r in g s . S e m inole-B revnrd S ta le A ttorney
Norm W olfluger. and about
6 .0 0 0 Sem inole. Brevard and
O range C ounty concerned eitl/e n s w ho signed |K-tllinns to
prevent M cDougall's early re­
lease from prison.
T he redefining of the release
law s m ay go far beyond Ihe
M cDougall e ase. C orrections
officials say dozens more sex­
ual child ubusers m ay now end
up serving longer prison se n ­
tences following un attorney
g e n e ra l's opinion that blocked
M eD ougall'scurly release.
"It w-ill affect u substantial
Mersld Ffwte by *tetw&lt; Meptloe

Bee Release. Page BA
R e la te d E d ito ria l, Page 4 A

Trumbo given 1053 award

Ihe C incinnati Dcngals and was recently cm by the
Green Bay Packers, was arrested Dee. IB and charged
wllh rape after allegedly Inviting a woman lo Ills home
In the exclusive Alaqun com m unity for lunch, then
drugging her cocktail and forcing her lo have sex with
him while Ills room m ate Greg Calloway videotaped the
act.
B illups a n d Callow ay w ere also ch arg ed w ith
attem pting to extort 820.000 from the wom an by
ultcgcdly threatening to show the videotape to her
husband If she did not pay.
Billups plans to plead Innocent to the charges when
he goes before the Judge next m onth.
S h eriffs officials said that other women have m ade
sim ilar com plaints regarding Billups, but only the one

Rubun said Ihe low bidder for Ihe
contract is expeeted lo be rcvculcd
by no la te r th a n th e close of
business on Mon.. Ja n . 4.
T he county has received Informa­
tion regarding u "T ender Agree­
m en t." It defines the responsibilities

With a new prime contractor to be named Monday to resume work on the
stalled road-widening, Seminole County officials expect this sign on Lake
L Bee Road, Page BA
Mary Boulevard can be removed by no later then June 14.

A A A law suit: C o u n ty defends property appraisal
By J . MARK BARPIBLO
andOBOROB DUNCAN
Herald Staff Writers

SANFORD — A Sem inole County property
a p p ra ise r’s official says the co unty's property
a sse ssm e n t o f the Am erican Automobile Associa­
tio n 's H eathrow h ead q u arters Is sound.
B ut AAA th in k s a $7 million m istake h as been

m ade In Its tax bill and Is suing to the rectify the
m atter.
Lori G rim m , com m ercial property supervisor
for the county, said a construction cost consul­
tan t was used to establish com m ercial stru ctu re
values. Those figures were com pared with local
prices to establish a replacem ent cost for the
building. After th e value is depreciated to
□Bee A A A , Page BA

Gone fiehln'

(A A A , like any other taxpayer
in the county, preserves its
right to petition for a new
assessment. $
-G o o ff Sundatrom , spokesm an lo r A A A

City grants final
O K to teen home,
beer distributor

Fro m s ta ll a n d w ire reports

By NICK PPKIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer____________________________

IN D R X
Krldgo......
ClaulflMiu, ...41,11
Comic*.....
Crossword...
Door Abby..„.......roil**
Booths......
Or. Oott....
Kdltorlol....
Florid*......
Much of the eame
'-I.

v: ■:
....ai
....IA

i

P artly cloudy w ith a
high In th e m id 70s.
W in d n o r t h e a s t
10-15 m ph.
H*f(M Photo by Richard Hopkins

For

Chris Pedati, left, and Luke Silers are enjoying
their school holiday vacation time. The boys
spent the day fishing at Lake Mary's Crescent

Park, on Country Club Road, one of Ihe city's
refurbished neighborhood parks. They returned
all fish caught to the pond.

SANFORD — A m ajor beer distributor and u
residential futility for troubled tccqs won approv­
al from Sanford elly com m issioners tills week.
It look only m in u tes for com m issioners to OK
Ihe two m ajor o|K-ratlons. Both Item s were
approved on second und final rcudlng Monday
night.
A rcznnlng was upproved for approxim ately 5
acres of lund off S. Sanford Avenue for Teen
Challenge. The lund hud been zoned as R l-l.
re s tric te d In d u s tria l. T h e ' c o m m issio n h a s
approved a rezoning lo RMOI. m ultiple fumlly
residentlal/olilee and Inslllulinnal.
The facility will house up lo 100 persons, und
have a live-in stuff or 10 occupying the :i0.000
square foot building presently on the site.
W hen the m utter was brought up several weeks
ago fur first reading, ow ners of several Industrial
operations surrounding the property objected lo
the rezoning. suylng that It should rem ain
Industrial. The com m issioners however upproved
ihe rezoning unanim ously ul both readings.
C om m issioner A.A. McClunuhan said at a
November m eeting. "I fall to see tills type of use
would uffeel o th er areas. We have an em pty
complex, and this Is un opportunity lo put
som ething |&gt;osltlvc into It."
The second parcel handled swiftly hy Ihe
See C ity , Page BA

BUDGET PLEASERS at Ed Milcarsky’s Appliance Centre of Longwood See Today's

�_____

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him out Ibrthe remainder of the trip.
Th e guard'* hands w e n bound wtth rape
and hta feet were bound wtth a red and blue
striped belt, according to L t. Joaquin
j&gt;fu» of the Metro ******
W*A
who on duty at the airport
Th e guard. Andres Her
where he was
Pan American
treated and rate_________ IJ H P P P I H P
tag to hospital spokeswoman Michelle

bench Tueaday

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"H e got very eacliied from tf w

to time

Alcohol

environm entalists

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, Deoember 90, 10K -

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Traffic-related chargo*

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Mies. gam bling and violent crimM In the vtcfruty of the store,

IncldMte reportedtoSanfordpolles:
• A $370 cor phone waa reportedly stolen Wednesday, from
a vehicle owned by Forest Utter, of Hew Sm yrna Beach. Th e
car eras parked at 1300 8. French Ave. at the time.
• A residential burglary waa reported between Oct. 1 and
Nov. 30. at 115 Maplewood D r., Sanford. Property owner
Margaret Morris reported the incident Thursday. She told
police a num ber of long distance calls had also been made from
the telephone In the home.
• A $150 VC R waa reportedly
Wednesday from the
f 14 Laurel Ave.
At
home of Elisabeth A . Hoftneister. Apt. A , 714
• A VCR waa reportedly taken Wednesday from the home of
Muriel Schlegel, 3406 Chase Avenue. Police said the V C R waa
later found In the yard of the home.
• A mobile telephone and brief case were reported stolen
Saturday from a pickup truck owned by Jeff Oreen. at 3411
Stevens Ave. Police found the briefcase several hours la ta at
24th Street and Sum m erlin Ave.
• A satellite VC R control box was reportedly taken between
Wednesday and Saturday, from the home of W illiam Klein, 309
Laurel Drtve. Klein
reported ly out of town at the time of
the burglary.
• A b u m a ry waa reported
Saturday.
tied at 1307 W . 11th Street Saturday,
Herculee River, owner of fthe *
'
home reported
nothing had been
fir ic m iinfd in hr m isslns
• A VC R valued at $100 was repaftedUy stolen Friday from
the home ofStephen Henry, 9 3 1 W . 11th Street
•Edw ard Van Sctver reported to police that he was accosted
m he was riding hla bike on 8th Street near Pine Ave., on
Friday. He told police the man took his pocket pager, and (led,
taking the Mke as well.

located In the 3500 M o d i of State Road 45. Deputies report
when they arrtved at about S p jn . Monday, they saw about 18
men gathered around a car parked near the store. Deputies
report seeing a pile of cash on the hood of the car and several
men holding playing cards.
Deputies report when the men saw them, they drqpped the
cards and oqe m an frthered up cash and the cards. Donald
Rena Cam pbell, 39. 3371 O reenway, Sanford, was charged
w ith gam bling. Deputies also r eport Campbell had a pair of alee

Traffic stop toads to arvaat
Francis Troutm an, 36. 1381 Dunbar Avenue. Lake Monroe,
was arrested by a Seminole County deputy Monday following a
traffic stop on Orange Avenue near County Road 15.
Troutm an waa arrested on charges of driving a car w ith a tag
not assigned to It and on a warrant charge of failure to appear
In court to answer to charges of driving w ith a suspended
license and having a car with a tag not assigned to it.

In hla pockets.
they asked the group to disburse, one
realities at them and said "H e can't
make us*leave." Th e m an, W illie Perry Gaines, 37 .9 0 S W illow
Ave.. Sanford, was charged w ith inciting a riot. Deputies also
found Oalnes was wanted on a charge or failure to appear on
court to answer to a drug sale charge.

ouk m in s

AtM ultrtporttd

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Three weeks ago. David T .
Sheren walked through his
neighborhood handing out fliers
to help find a missing Cham
berlaJnl
berialn High School student. But

K •*'{■] &gt;7
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store w ith seven eUk shirts, w ith a value off 9143. hidden In the
crotch area of her clothes. Lam arr was arrested on a shoplifting
charge. She was also arrested for an outstanding shoplifting
charge.

rin f im itp o ifd liu lu
A resident of a home In the 3900 Mock of Central Drive
reported to Sanford police four firearms valued at 1980 were
taken from the residence sometime Monday between 6:35 a.m.
and 3:58 p jn ,

y

answer to a driving w ith a suspended liocnee charge.
• Je d Lane Richardson. 43. 901 E . W tldm ere A ve..
Longwood, was served w ith a warrant at the county Jail

r»'»M

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Bonck was. police said,
he had stabbed her to death.
"It Just turns m y stomach. It
Just turns m y stomach that he
M t here tn m y house, handing
out those brochures like he was
truly trying to help," said Julie
Johnson, whose house Sheren
visited.
|
Th e youth walked into I police
' station and confessed to the
crim e, then drew a map to show
authorities where to find the
body, police said.
Investigators used the map to
locate the corpse tn a wooded
' area near a shopping ptasa, i
Jack Espinosa, spokesman f a
the Hillsborough Sheriffs Office.
Miss Bonck, who suffered from
cerebral palsy, had been missing
since Dec. 8 when she left home
to walk to a friend 'a house.
Indianapolis Police 8 ft. Oreg
Btebertcti said Sheren w m a r­
rested on a m urder charge and
was being held in the
; C o u n t y L o c k u p p e n d in g
; extradition toi Florida.
EapinoM said detectives would
• go to Indianapolis io question
; Sheren. He would not disclose
w h e th e r the yo u th gave a
■ motive.

-

•ALL DIAMONDS!
•ALL 14KT. GOLD!
•ALL WATCHE8!
•ALL PEARL8, GOLD
i »• i

Contra
AHimonta Mall
Wbilar Park Mall

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Warrant in v it i m id i

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A m i: uva
S h e re n , w h o ^ r e n d e r e d

ifo o n fiu

Donald W ayne Geiger. 2 8 .4 7 0 Lake Geneva Drtve, Geneva.

Cops: Teen
admits to
killing girl
TA M P A ~ A 16-year-old who
confessed to the s lsyin g of
another teen-ager had Joined
others working to find the young
woman’s killer.

1
Jig,’-,

Patricia A nn Lam arr, 43, 1406 W . 13th Place. Sanford, w m
arrested by Altamonte Springs police In front of Burlington
sRosa 43611
*
^

• A gas leak was reported Friday, at Therm -o-Tane Oas
Com pany, 414 W . 9th Street in Sanford. Police reported
someone had apparently broken Into 'the building, and opened
valves on gas tanka. Clyde Robertson, who reported the
Incident told police a large amount of propane gas w m lost.
Adams. A p t 30. 440 MeUonvMe Ave., told police
broke Into h a home Christm as Eve, open the
under the tree, and escaped w ith selected gifts
approximately 91,774.

•
.
!
;

ME :•
f

Deborah Ann Yurecko, 32, 3303 Orlando Drive, Apt. 508,
Sanford, w m arrested b y a Lake M ary policeman on several
traffic-related charges Monday evening on Lake Mary Boule­
vard.
Th e policeman reported finding the tag on Yutecko'a car was
stolen and stopped h a . She w m arrested on charges of petit
theft, attaching a tag not assigned to h a car, driving w ith a
suspended license ana providing no proof of auto insurance.

. f. .

-

*!V |

�9

BEN

W ATTENBERG

An old argument for a new era
W ho won the right to govern? Behind the
scenes, foreign policy offlctala allegedly repre­
senting George Bush are tryin g to shape
long-range decisions In direct opposition to the
views of Bill Clinton. On the surface the Issue Is
the "Israel transm itter." Ju s t beneath the
surfoce Is an old argument that never goes away.
D uring the campaign there were distinct
differences, along classic lines, between the
candidates. Clinton's position was a textbook
explication of the "Idealistic" school of thought
He said American foreign policy should stress
prom oting democracy In the world. He criticised
Bush for not being assertive enough as a
dem ocracy-purveyor — not In Russia, the
B tlkniB , Bosnia o r C h in i.
Bush took the "Pragm atic" position. It has
always been pushed by the State Departm ent
(Often regardless oT the president's views.)
Pragmatists have no problem w ith democracy
but often place a higher value on stability. It’s a
dangerous world, they say, so let's not rock the
boat, and let’s make deals, even w ith bod guys.
It Is a serious argum ent that has rippled
through Am erican foreign policy for a long time.
D uring the Cold W ar. facing a nuclear adversary,
the cautious Pragmatist view had great appeal.

EDITORIALS

Siegel true to
his word about
violent crime
W hen G a ry Siegel of A lta m o n te S p rin g s
was ru n n in g for election In F lo rid a Senate
D istrict 12, he said one o f hla first prio rities
w ould be to deal w ith vio len t crim e s. Siegel
has stuck to h is w ord.
D u rin g his cam paign, he w as quoted aa
saying, "1 w ill be a stro ng advocate o f n o e a rly
release for convicted felons w h o are vio len t,
dangerous and/or sex offenders/*
Siegel has ce rta in ly carried o u t the prom ise
in the case of D onald M cD o uga ll. w h o w ill
now rem ain In priso n for at least an o ther five
years rather than being released e a rly o n N ew
Year’s E ve . P rovisional cred its granted to
m a n y c o n v ic te d c rim in a ls , w o u ld h a ve
allowed M cD ougall to w a lk o u t o f priso n after
serving o n ly ten years of a 34 ye a r te rm .
E ve n w ith the five years returned to his
tim e, he w ill s till be s e rvin g o n ly 15 years,
unless additional changes are m ade In the
sentencing statutes.
&lt;
Siegel, alo n g w ith S e m ino le B re va rd State
A tto rne y N o rm W olflnger a n d Corrections
Secretary H a rry 81ngletary. led the fight In
keeping M cD ougall In prison. Siegel la also
pla nn in g on e x pan d in g the d riv e beyond the
M cD ougall situ a tio n , to Include o ther s im ila r

angry.
One part of the
argum ent has con­
cerned American in­
te rn a tio n a l ra d io
Pragm atists liked
th e “ V o i c e o f
Am erica," operating
un de r the indirect
auspices of the State
Departm ent Idealists
said VO A was fine for
g e n e ra l o v e rs e a s

£ Just bsflgath
thssurfacsls
an old
argument that
never goes
away, j

False claims riddle
worker compensation

taVdii?

• ••

release: People do
make a difference
Leaderahip a t the state level played a M g
part In preven ting D onald M cDougsff ’s e a rly
re le a s e fro m p r is o n . T h e a c tio n w a s
m otivated b y a p u b lic o u tcry o ve r a system
that w o u ld aUpw th is to happen.
T h is proves th a t yo u ca n fig h t c ity h a ll, o r
In th is case, the state an d its la
early release, and w in .
If It were n o t for a few
w ho kept th e ir eye* o n w l .......... 4 _
_
others w o uld have not Known that the
convipted m an was to be re leased (to rn a 34
ye ar sentence after servin g only 10year*.
W he n the dUxena becam e aw are o f the
situation, they let (h e ir voices be heard, and
circulated petitions. T h e lla t.o f 0 .0 0 0 nam e*
w as subm itted to the state c o n te tio fte office,
legislators and state atto rn ey’s office. T h e y
were all asked to Intercede.
To o m an y tim es, people
have lost co n tro l o ver {
believe the operations o f th e ir cities,
and state are e n tire ly In . th e ha nd s « m e
elected official*.
T h is action proves citlaena stiff cncrcfoe
control. T h is la s till g o ve rn m e n t b y th e

don't get the Chinese

n
tri 001WW"!
mun-Jd «W 7 ’f
.OSli i

fJi xh ycA"j

.-

ELLEN GOODMAN
•*'*&amp;K

slate clean
benk b y that tide; Th e Jo y of No Sexi Bow to
Stop worrying about A ID S and Start liv in g

r

Surjwtael His/her pregnancy turned out to te a
U i f li iu d : N o w o n to th e
w o rd -p o lic e , th a t
g ro u p o f d ilig e n t
JT
J ^ L
reader* ready and
eager to find etn In
the syatax, not to

W ASH IN G TO N - Th e nation's oldest social
program — workers' compensation Insurance
— ta reeling from grossly inflated medical
bills, rocketing litigation costs, fraud and
abuse.
Th e files of insurance investigators are
teeming
Ing w
v ith esses like that of a Baltimore
man who was lifting
:ing a
i box on the Job at a
supermarket and feTt a twinge of pain. He
collected for lost work and medical bills on
the ftrst Injury and
(hen made a second
claim, saying h r had
slipped on an oily
floor and re-injured
himself.
Investigators sus­
pected that his dis­
co m fo rt ste m m ed
more from a broken
Jaw received In a
barroom brawl. But
h e refused to go back
to work — at least
refused to continue
-h is . day -jo b - . Th en
IUI
Investigators learned
that hit
he w a l w o r k in g
discomfort
nights as an exotic
stemmed
d a n c e r In a
mors from*
C h ip p e n d a le -lik e
broken jaw
atrip Joint, wearing
rscolvad in a
fur boots and a fur
bikini and passing a
larch between hla legs
orawi. _________
Today, some 90 m l Ikm American workers
arc covered by workers’ comp, which Is
something on the order of nine out of 10
workers. Although strip-dancing m ay not be
covered, the variety of Jobs under this
umbrella Is staggering. W orkers' comp pays
, when actor Me) Gibson gets bruises and pains
doing his own stunts on the set of "Lethal
Weapon 3 ." Former Washington Redskin
quarterback Doug W illiams, who led his team
to a 42-10 Super Bowl rout of the Denver
Broncos In 1988, reportedly collects a weekly
$513 workers' comp payment from the d u b .
And on the horizon are a host of new Uls, a
Pandora’s box of troubles for workers'
compensation claims never foreseen In the
original comp acts aeven decades ago — AIDS
cases from health-care workers, and those
suffering from “ secondary smoke" Inhala­
tion. A n d now. low levels of radiation
emission from computer monitors and even
police radar guns m ight result in compensa­
ble claims in some states.
We have been publishing the results of our
own long-term Investigation during a scries of
c o lu m n s . In c lu d in g one fo c u s in g on
California, where a recent survey found that
one in four businesses now has plans' to
relocate some o r all of Its operations out of the
slate. Th e total cost now for aU this coverage
annually ta more than $62 billion — nearly
tripling In the last decade alone; and far
outpacing Uie rise in health-care costa during
the same period.
•

P&lt;W e com m end all who took a n active part In
circu la tin g and sign in g the petitions. W e
cheer those w ho took the ball a n d ra n with It.
T h e y proved that the people w ere concerned
and united.
O ne person, even the entire legislature,
c a n n o t do e v e ry th in g . B u t w ith p u b lic
support, even w h a t seems unchangeable can.
be changed. It ju s t happened.

Berry’s World

Fraud, abuse and related escalating coda In
the w orkers’ com p system besides
weakening the competitiveness of American
business - ta also crippling for Alabama.
C o n n e c t ic u t . F l o r i d a . L o u la la n a .
Massachusetts, Montana. Pennsylvania and
Texas. Th e two stales In greatest crisis today
are Rhode Island and Maine.

■

L c m

rJmrn,

broadcasting about
Am erica. But they wanted more assertive
program m ing to non-free adversaries. Th e y
boosted "R adio Free E uro pe" and "Radio
Liberty," which beamed fair but tough prodemocracy "hom e service" broadcasts, featuring
local news, to the repressed Soviet Union and
their East European satellites.
Pragmatists thought "Th e Radios" were too
"anti-com m unist." too zealous about promoting
democracy, and a little uncouth. Th e y were not
controlled by State but by the aemt-autonomous
Board for International Broadcasting. Th ey used
budget funds that m ight go to V O A and State.
Recently Pragmatists have covetously eyed
$180 m illion appropriated for a new field of
short-wave transmitters In Israel. A project of the
Radios, the transmitters are designed to beam
home-service signals to restive Islamic popula­
tions In South Central Asia, aa well as to other
African and Aslan locations.
(I served as vice chairman of BIB, aa well aa on
several broadcasting study commissions.)
Bush, who has run a gracious transition.
, should accede to that request. Not to do so would
be neither pragmatic nor idealistic.

JACK ANDERSON

D u rin g p o litic a l ca m p a ig n s , ca ndidates
alm ost alw ays m ake prom ises. It la reassuring
to see th is one carried o u t so p ro m p tly , ana
w ith such effective results.
Sen. Siegel d id n 't do It alone, b u t hla w o rk
gave ad d itio n al strength to the d rive that
prevented M cD ougall from being gtyen an .. "
eaat rly release
fro mIRipW
prisolfnrh’h
n.
bslJWfltV
!
T)|.| lf|*J1
» lOfll)

In the less-dangerous, post-Cold W ar world,
Idealism has gained added stature. (It's the
ultimate pragmatism, aay Idealists.)
Th e argument d id n 'tend w ith the Cold War,
Idealists are saying
p u s h d e m o c ra c y
lo rw ira in cofnmu*
n lst C h in a by a t­
t a c h in g . h u m a n
rights conditions to
tra d e p o lic ie s .
P r a g m a t is t s s a y

.

n T o E n r o R

•

O nly a 300-percent rate Increase could
persuade private Insurers to return to Maine,
from
whichmoal
n
__________
have fled. "Maine ta the best
cxdmple of the total crisis - a meltdown ta a
good way to describe It," Thom as Sm ith, a
vice president of the Travelers Insurance
Cried a "Safety Lottery" for six month* to cut
down am workers' comp costs. She began It
w he aS S of I $5 refuse workers were m il on
workers' com p. So she began randomly
drawtad 10 names of sanitation workers ai
the cad of each m onth. If not one was out on
------- receive $300. It had a
rt. hut didn’t slash the heavtaet
for Pittsburgh — from cops and
Th e ch y la M U reeling from the
each year in w o rse n'co m p
*6jjar .-

�&gt;■ n

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Honda - Wednesday, December 30, 1992 - a*

Road

Billups
C o n t i a u i f M i P l# « I A
woman hoi
chosen to press charges.
Now. a sheriffs office report
indicates. Billups has been called
at home by two women, one
asking “ for a good tim e" and the
other asking for 9300.
"Th e most we have here Is
h a rra ssln g co m m u n ica tio n s
charges." said Praechel. 'p u l we
have assigned an Investigator to
(he case."
W h ile a tto rn e y Qene
Stephenson, w ho represents
Billups, said he has not listened
to the tapes or the phone calls
made to Billups’ home, he has
reason to believe that the callers
ore two of the women who have
made com plaints against his
client.
"Th is could very possibly have
some bearing on his case."
Stephenson said this morning.
"W e have asked (he sheriffs
department (o continue with
their Investigation."
Billups told the sheriffs de­
partment Monday that at 1:30
that m orning, a woman called
his home and said that they had

met at an Orlando night club
IA
and that she would like to gel
to Country Club Road, could be
together "for a good tim e."
of the county and
finished
by the time the widen­
according to department Infor­ the bonding agent In connection
ing program Is completed. "W c
mation.
with the awarding' of a new
will be trying o ur best to avoid
Using the "Caller ID " feature contract.
any further traffic tie-ups," he
on his telephone. Billups told the
Rabun said county officials
said.
\
sheriff's departm ent, he has tentatively agreed on the terms
Work on the widening from
been able to Identify the caller,
oT the agreement yesterday. "W e
Interstate 4 to County Club Road
P r o e c h e l s a id t h a t I n ­ have already set up a special
came
to a complete, nail in Ju ly
vestigators have been told by Ihe Board of County Commissioners'
when the original prime con­
wom an that she has called meeting on Wednesday. Jan . 6.
tractor. Jo h n Mahoney Con­
Btllupa for a date In the past, but a t. 1:30 p .m .." he said, "to
struction Com pany announced It
that she told them that she did execute the .'tender agreement'
could not complete the prefect
not call him on Monday and that and to accept the low bid,"
due to financial reasons.
she was not even at home on
"I'm extremely pleased that o
In s u r a n c e C o m p a n y of
Monday.
new prime contractor Is now
America, the company which
Proechel said the Investigation being established." said Lake
held the surely bonds on the
will continue.
Mary C ity Manager John LHion
project launched an investiga­
Another woman, who BIUups this morning. "N ow we will have
tion Into the matter to determine
has been unable to Identify, has to make our next move and get
the proper course of action to
allegedly called him three times ihe final beautification plans
to dem and $300 cash from underway and get that out for* find a replacement.
The investigation was started
Billups, the report said. The bidding."
in August, fl resulted In an
report did not specify the reason
"W hoever the new contractor
agreement to have the project
the woman was demanding the is." he added, "he w ill also havr
rc-bld. Th e bids have now been
money.
lo do some make-up work to
received and opened, and the
Billups was not available for correct problem s lh a l have
low bidder has been determined,
com m ent this m orning, but transpired In some of the con­
but not Immediately Identified.
Proechel said the sheriff's de­ struction areas since the work
Earlier this m onth, Rabun had
partment is pursuing the In­ stopped."
projected the road prefect could
vestigation at the attorney’s
L i t t o n h o p e d t h a t the
be back underw ay by m id request.
beatification, from the Interstate
January.

AAAIA
accommodate .wear
and tear, a value Is set for taxing
purposes, said G rim m .
“ W e use a n a t i o n a l l y re c o g n is e d c o s t i n g f ir m .
M a rsh a ll and S w if t ," said
G rim m . "Th e y ore used all over
the country."
Seminole County assessed Ihe
Ihe A A A headquarters In Heath­
row at $46.3 m illion In 1992.
When the company protested
the amount, the Value Adjust­
ment Board reduced the assess­
ment to $42.4 m illion. The VAB.
comprised of county commis­
sioners and school board mem­
bers. has the power to lower
appraisals.
Th e $42.4 m illion Is still too
high, according to the company.
In the suit against the county.
A A A attorney Stephen Snlvely
said the assessment "cannot be
suppo rted by a reasonable
hypothesis of values."
Th e company claims the land
should be assessed for $35
million.
If the county accepted the
lower figures, the A A A would
owe about $655,000 In

Th e higher ffgure would make
the A A A lax bill approximately
$794,000.
Th e company wants the court
to make a final determination
and also wants the court to
enjoin the county from collecting
the taxes un til the' Issue is
settled.
G rim m s a id th e c o u n ty
the 40-acre site and
741.000-square-foot building at
about $30.1 m illion In 1991.
G rim m said a special master,
who reviews appraisal appeals,
recommended V A B members
lower the value based on the
amount of space In the building
used for higher-valued purposes,
such as offices. Th e change
lowered the value from $46.3
m illion to $42 m illion. Grim m
W hen A A A contractors were
issued perm its to build the
headquarters In 196$. they
placed a construction value of
$34 m illion on the structure,
said Dave Belts, county building
ofTlcial. Belts said A A A con­
tractors were Issued several
other perm its for fire safety
system s and other im prove­

ments valued al $667,230. No
values were given to the county
fo r o rig in a l s ite c le a rin g ,
landscaping and Irrigation and
their parking lot. said Belts.
Th e association moved from
Virginia to Seminole County In
1989, It Is a non-profit corpora­
tion that provides members with
travel in fo rm a tio n and
emergency help on highways.
G eoff S u n d s tro m . a
spokesman for A A A . said he
could not discuss the matter In
detail since a lawsuit was pend­
in g but said the firm was
exercising its right to appeal the
assessment.
"E ve r since A A A decided to
move to the county, we in ­
dicated we fully Intended to be a
full participant In the local
economy, by paying our fair
share of taxes, by a local payroll
and local purchasing." Sundslrom said. However, the firm
felt major issues had not been
resolved by a tax deadline, he
"A A A , like any other taxpayer
In the county, preserves Its right
to petition for a new ----------m ent," heaald.

IA
co m m issio n
Monday night, was annexation,
and rezonlng of 10 acres of land
at the northeast Intersection of
S.R. 46 and Rand Yard Road.
The land Is to be used as a
major beer distributing firm ,
M ountain D istrib u to rs C o m ­
pany. a subsidiary of Wayne
Densch. Inc. Densch Is the area's
Budwelser beer distributor. The
commission first acted to annex
the land into city property, then
to rezone It from M-2. industrial,
lo PD. planned development.
As was the case with the Teen
Challenge second reading, the
two measures were passed with
no public Input, and no com­
ments from the members o fthe
commission.
Construction of the beer dis­
tributing warehouse, expected to
be 0 3 ,0 0 0 s q u a re fe et, . Is
expected to begin in January.
When operational. It w ill Initially
employ 34 persons.

‘Few Good Men’
Is No. 1 again
AP intftalnm ant Writer________
LO B A N G E L E S Ja c k
Nicholson as a ruthless union
boss couldn't compete over the
Christmas weekend with Jack
Nicholson as a hard-as-nalls
" A Few Good M en," starring
Nicholson and To m Cruise, held
on to No. 1 at the box office for
tbs third week In a row, earning
$13,0 million, Exhibitor Rela­
tions Co. said Monday. "Hoffa,"
the $43 million epic m which
Nicholson plays Teamsters boas
Jim m y Honk, debuted at No. 6
with lust $6.4 million.
"CnapUn," the film biography

Release-------IA
num ber of violent Inm ates."
A tto rn e y G eneral Bob B u tterworth said. "It will help us
move In the right direction —
keeping the more violent prison­
ers behind bars."
Th e Department of Correct Ions
has begun review of about 100
other Inmates Involved In child
sexual abuse. B utterw orth 's
opinion said such offenders
aren't eligible for reduced sen­
tences under a "provisional
credit4' system Intended to case
prison overcrowding.
The opinion, drafted Monday
and made official Tuesday, re­
commended elimination of 1,820
c r e d it d a y s for D o n a ld
(dcDougall. 37. who was sched­
uled to go free on New Year's
Eve. Corrections Secretary Harry
Singletary voided that credit
Tuesday, restoring five years to
McDougall's prison term.
. He was convicted in 1983 of
aggravated child abuse and sec­
o n d -d e g re e m u rd e r in the
torture-stabbing of 5-year-old
Ursula Sunshine Aaeald. The
dramatic case was the subject of
a book.
T h e g irl, w ho live d w ith
McDougall and her mother In
Seminole County, was deprived
of food and water for days, fed
soap and forced to stand naked
fo r h o u rs a n d re c ite th e
alphabet, according to trial tes­
tim ony.
' Deputy Corrections Secretary
Bill T h u tte r said aboqt 100, of
the Prison system's population
o f“ 49,100 m ight face longer

s r,«
Maria Em ilia A b ril. 66. of
Orange Avenue. Longwood. died
Monday, Dec. 28, at McLeod
R e g io n a l M e d ic a l C e n te r.
Florence. 8.C . Bom Sept 11,
1934. in the Philippines, she
moved to Central Florida In
1985. She was a homemaker
and a m em ber of S t. M ary
Magdalen Catholic Church.
Survivors Include daughters.
Lila A . Martija. Francis Rivera,
both of Longwood: son, Alfonso.
M a n ila : s la te rs . A s u n c io n
F o rn llo s a , R cm edloa Peres,
Lum lng David, all of the Philip­
pines: 15 grande hllden and five
great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Fun e ra l
Home, Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.

Gwendolyn Langford Craig.
52. of 513 Bristol Drive. Alta­
monte Springs, died Thursday,
Dec. 34. at his residence. Bom
M ay 8 . 1940. In K no xville,
Te n n ., he moved to Central
Florida In 1984. He was a retired
music teacher.
,
Survivor* include wife. Floyd,
A l t a m o n t e S p rin g s : s o n s .
Gregory Langford. California.
C h risto p h e r Langford, A lta ­
monte Springs.
National Cremation Society.
W inter Park, in charge of ar­
rangements.

in 1963 from Sanford. She was a
W a rn .
Survivors Include wife. Mabie domestic and a Primitive Bap­
tist. Mrs. M cCray was a member
M.
: sons. Thom as. Syracuse.
N. Y .: daughters. Renette Sweet. of Lily White Lodge *71. San­
Sanford. Frances. Rochester. ford.
She is survived by a son, ihe
N .Y.. and Bettie W ynn. Ft. Knox.
K y.: nine grandchildren.
R e v. C h a rle s M . Ja c k s o n .
WUaon-Eichelberger Mortuary,
Newnan. and one grandchild.
Wilson-Elchelberger Mortuary.
Inc., Sanford, In charge of ar­
Inc.. . Sanford, In charge of ar­
rangements.
rangements.

of Charlie Chaplin starring Rob­
ert Downey J r ., made $$4,669 in
limited release on five screens.
Children's movies were No. 2
and No. 3 over the holiday
weekend: "A laddin." with $13.4
m illion, and "Hom e Alone 2:
Lost In New Yo rk" with $9.1
m illion.
"Trespass," a new drama w ith
rappers Ice Cube and lce -T,
made $S m illion for seventh
place.
Robin Williams* "To y s ," the
only To p 10 film to lose business
from a weekend ago. was 10th
with $4 million. And “Malcolm
X " fell out of the To p 10 after six
weeks.

B utterw orth's opinion said
McDougnll could be excluded
from provisional credits for both
the sex abuse and second-degree
m urder convictions.
But before applying his opi­
nion to m urder cases, which
could Involve m any more In­
mates, the Corrections D epart-1
men! wants Butlcrworth to look
at lhal Issue again.
McDougall was sentenced to
34 years In prison, but 24 years
were erased through various
forms of "gain tim e" for good
behavior, working In prison In­
d u s trie s and lo alleviate
overcrowding.
B u tte rw o rth 's opinion
addresses only the credits for
overcrowding.
"M cD ougall has absolutely
zero days off his sentence
because of overcrowding cred­
its," the attorney general said.
"In m y 25 years In the system. I
don't know of any other case
more shocking. A person like
that should never be released
from prison — never."
Even though McDougall has
had five years tacked onto his
sentence, the other credits prob­
ably w ill m ean he actually
serves Just three more years.
Under state law. Inmates who
behave and work are given 10 to
20 days off their sentence for
every month served.
Bulterworih said he expected
McDougall to find an attorney
and challenge the opinion in
«&gt;urt*
iftmstM

,f frrtffrrw

H M V M R .O U IIU B M V
H n m r, aw f t el tarter* she fweeS

C h a rlie J a y H eavner. 93.
Mohawk Avenue. Sanford, died
Tuesday. Dec. 39. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Bom May 35. 1900. In
Newton. N .C ., he m oved to
Central Florida in 1965. He was
a retired construction equipment
mechanic and a member of the
Good Shepherd Lutheran
Church. Sanford.
Survivors Include daughters.
Lo u ise H a rris . E stelle
Leatherman, both of Sanford:
fjnuMMrata 117
fiat
* q iv «
ofomen* uoscpn
w## d
b aw
David. Edgewater. Luther. Hick­
ary. N .C .: sisters. Lucy Oresseil,
Minnie Esm shaw, both of San­
ford: four grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Fu n e ra l
Home, Oaklawn- Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
rangements.
C A M S M AE M eCSAY
Caasie Mae M cCray. 90, of 2
Westgate Parkw ay. Newnan.
Oa.. died Saturday, Dec. 36, at
Humana Hospital. Newnan. Ga.
Bom April 12. 1900, In Clay
County, she moved to Newnan

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fo r Long Term R elia b ility!

Eugene "O ene" I. Crim m ins.
6 2 . of Colum bus. G a „ died
Friday. Dec. 35. at Doctor's
Hospital, Colum bus. Oa. Bam
Aug. 37. 1930. in Asheville.
N.C.. he was a longtime resident
of Sanford. He was a retired
* pharmaceuticals salesman for
Schering Carp, and attended St.
A n ne C a th o lic C h u rc h . M r.
Crim m ins was an A rm y veteran
of the Korean W ar.
S u rvivo rs include m other,
Lillian B. Crim m ins. Asheville:
wife, Joan: sons. D r. La rry,
Colum bus. D r. Pat. Valdosta.
Ga.s sister. Delores Solomon,
Tam pa: one granddaughter.
8 triffle r ha m b y M o rtuary.
Colum bus, In charge of a r­
rangements.
U W ___________
Lee Haywood. 60. 1330
W . 8th St.. Sanford, died Sun­
day. Dec. 37. at his residence.
Bom May 7.1932. in Sanford, he
was a lifelong resident. He was a
truck driver and a Meihodlsi. Mr.
Haywood was a veteran of World

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7

BA - Santord Herald. Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. December 30, 1092

Legal Notices

Ltgal Notice*

Legal Notices

Ltgil Notices

N O TIC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at SM
Wexdon Ct.. Lake Mary, Semi­
nole County, Florida, under the
Flctlllout Name of O ESIG N ER
FLO O R S L TD ., and that I Intend
to regltter laid name with the
Secretary ol Stale. Tallahatiee.
Florida. In accordance with the
p ro v lilo n t ol the Flclltlou i
Name Statute. To-WII: Section
0*5.08. Florida Slatutei 1fS7.
SandraM. Eppi
Publish■December 30. tffl
D E Z 787

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E ISTH J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D P O N
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
O E N E R A L J U R IS D IC T IO N
O IV IS IO N
CASK N O .i 9 M 1 M C A 1 0 P
C ITIB A N K . F E D E R A L
SAVINGS B A N K , an asaoclatlon
organ Ired and existing under tha
law* of the United State* of
America.
Plaintiff,

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
OP TH E ISTH JUD ICIAL
CIR CUIT, IH A H O FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CA SR N O .fI-ini-C A 1 4 F
S.V. CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC., a Florida
nbt-for-profit corporation,
Plaintiff,
v.
M ICHAEL LOBOSCO,
Defendant.
NOTICE OF
a
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y OIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment at
Foreclosure datod Decomber 18.
tffl. and entered In Casa No.
82-2112-CA •14P of the Circuit
Court of the 18th Judicial Circuit
In and lor Seminole County,
Florida, wharaln S.V. CONDO­
M INIUM ASSOCIATION. INC.
Is Plaintiff, and M IC H A E L
LOBOSCO It Defendant. I will
tall to the highest and bast

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at I8M
Sweetwater Club Blvd., Longwood. F L 31778. Somlnola
County, Florida, under tha
Flctlllout Name af FLORIDA
OREAM MACHINES, and that I
Intend to register said name
with tha Secretary at State.
Tallahassee, Florida. In ac­
cordance with tha provisions of
the Fictitious Name Statute.
To-WII: Section 88148, Florida
Statutes I8S7.
William O. Firmed
Publish: December 38. tffl
OEZ-lto

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F FL O R ID A .
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY
O E N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
OIVISION
CASE NO. 83-1371 CA If K
L IB E R T Y L E N D IN G
SER VICES. INC..
Plaintiff.
G L E N H. M A R TIN , at. al..
Oafendent(s).
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
T O : G L E N H. M A R T IN and
E V E L Y N M. M A R T IN , hit wife
Residence Unknown
If alive, and If daad. all
parties claiming Interest by,
through, under or against G LE N
H. M A R TIN and E V E L Y N M.
M A R T IN , his wife, and all
parties having or claiming to
have any right, title or Interest
In the property herein de­
scribed.
You are hereby notified that
an action to forecloao a mort­
gage on the following property
In S E M IN O LE County, Florida:
Lot t7. Block B. S W E E T ­
W A TE R C LU B . U N IT O N E.
according to the plat thereof aa
recorded In Plat Book IS. Pages
M. 27. 28. Public Record! Of
Seminole County, Florida,
has been filed against you and
you arc required to servo a copy
of your written datenses. If any,
to It on B. J . Reeves. Esq..
Attorney tor Plaintiff, whcea
address Is Sulfa 300. 1870
Medruga Avenue, Coral Gables.
Florida. 33144 on o r bolero
January II. if f ], and file the
original with the clerk of this
court either bolero service on
Plaintiff's attorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered agalnat
you for the relief demanded In
the complaint.
W ITN ESS my hand and tha
seal of this court this 7th day of
Oocambor. Iff2.
(S E A L )
M A R Y A N N E M ORSE
As Clark ol the Court
By Cecelia V .E k e m
Aa Deputy Clark
Publish: December f. 14. *3, 30,
1ff2
OEZ-83
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T,
IN A N D FO B
S EM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A .
F R O B A TS DIVISION
CASE NO.: fl-411
IN R E : T H E E S T A T E O F
E L IZ A B E T H V. LOSIEW ICZ,

R A Y M O N D P E N A . J N „ at at..
N O T IC E O P
FO RECLOSURE S A LE
N O T IC E I t H E R E B Y O IV E N
pursuant to a Final Sum m ary
Judgment of Porecloaurs and
Tam il ion oil Foot and Coats,
datod Oocambor 17, i m , an
torod In C o m N o . 81-3130 C A t*F
ol I ho C ircu it Court of fho
S o m ln o la C o u n ty J u d i c i a l
Circuit, in and far t omlnalo
C o u n t y , F l o r i d a , w h o r e ln
C IT IB A N K . M D I R A L
SAVINOS B A N K , an aooactatUn
organised and existing under too
law* of fho United ttatoo of
America, Is the Plaintiff and
R A Y M O N D P E N A . J R ., at al.
are
Defendants,
I will sell
to
the
«-■
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-------*»■-»-«
_
_
__
_
_
_
_w
_
nigvwtT
mnoMIT
dnmvt w
vvr
CMH«
at the west front dear of the
Seminole County Courthouse,
301 N. Park A ve„ Sanford. P L
m r i at 11:80 o'clock an PoBrw

_
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- ma
il- -I
DEOBVr IBT CiWI
IT Ini- &gt;
tffll

property situate In Seminole
County, Florida, described as:
Lot 13. Block " t " , ST. JOHNS
R IV E R E S TA TE S , a Subdivi­
sion, according to tha plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
19. Page 94. ol the Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
at public sale, to the highest and
bast bidder, for cash, at tha
West Front Door ol the Seminole
County Courthouse, at Sanlord.
Florida at 11:80 A M . on Janu-

Front Door of the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford.
Seminole County. Florida, at
11:88 o'clock A M . on tha Mth
day of January, tffl, tha followforth In said Final Judgment, to
wtt:
Unit No. 3C of S U M M IT
VILLAG E, U N IT II. a Condo
minium, according to the Dec Ia
ration at Condominium thereof
es rocordod In Plat Book If at
Page 43 of the Public Record* el
Somlnola County, Florida
D A T E D this 22nd day at
M ARYANNE MORSE. Clark
Circuit Court
By Heather Brooke
Deputy Clark
Publish: December JO. Iff! A
January 4, Iff]
DEZ 201

M w ii % portion
N O R TH OR l

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engagod In buslnesa at 404
E . A lpine S t.. Altam onte
Springs. Semlnola County, Flor­
ida, under tha Fictitious Nemo
Of A L L C O N C R E T E C O N ­
CEPTS. and that I Intend to
register Mid nemo with the
Secretary at Stale, Tallahassee.
Florida. In accordance with the
provisions of tha Fictitious
Name Statute. To-Wit: Section
OSJ Of, Florida Statutes tfS7.
Robert A Alford
Publish: December 38, tffl
DEZ-284

N O TIC E la hereby given that
tha undacalgnad d a rk of Me
C irc u it Caw rt af Sem inole
County, Florida. wlH an January
r . 1088 , af 11:00 o'clock A M . at

December IT, Tffl, and entered
In Case Me. tS-WJe-CA tsO el the
Clrcutt Court af the 18th Judicial
Circuit in and for Seminole
C o u n t y . F lo r id a , wherein
C IT IC O R P M O R TO A O C. INC..
Is Plaintiff and R O B ER T L.
W IL L IA M S at al.. are Defen­
dants. I will salt to the highest

IN T H E CIR CUIT CO U R T.RIO H TER N TH JU D IC IA L
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOB
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. i ft-1780-CA-IS-P
FE D E R A L N A TIO N AL
M ORTGAOE ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,

N O TICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that wa
are engaged In buttnosa at c/e
Carbon Jeweler*. 188 N. Hwy.
17-81. Langweed, F L 32718. SemInete County, Florida, undsr the
F lc tlllo u t Nam e a t .T H E
EYEW EAR REPAIR C T &lt; „ and
that we Intend to rogtator told
name with tha Secretary of
State. Tallah0**00, Florida. In
accordance with tha prevision*
at the Fictitious Nome Statute.
To-Wit: Section 081.08, Florida
Statsita* I8S7.
Paul Barnard Jena* 11
Shirley R. Jana*
Publish: December 20. tffl
DEZ-lfS

IN T H E CIR CUIT COURT
O F T N I ISTH JU D ICIA L
CIR CU IT IN AND FOE
SEM IN O LECO U N TY,
FLORIDA
O EN ER A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE N O ft-MTt CA 14K
PH ILIP L. ORAHAM.
Plaintiff,
M ICHAEL WYNSTON, and
-------------WYNSTON.MssrtN.lt
any, II alive and If either af
them be dead, the heir*,
devisees, grantees. assignees,
lienors, creditors, trustees, or
other claimant* by. through,
under er against them, or either
o&lt; them, and all parties having
or claiming to have any right,

tllfwQeiniWTwl! 19*vw pf^wTy

r
tosrrlt
tort IT*
Int
oeWspiilNEInl)
rruimlalnt
WfLl
HtoU
ITW
rx.t_
_
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_
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I^WWWlTe.

N O TICE O F ACTION
CONSTRUCT tVB M R V IC R
Florida Bar N o .M O B
To: M ICHAEL WYNSTON and

FR E D O. WOLFS* ILL; at. al..

N O TIC E OP
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
The administration of the
e sta te of E L I Z A B E T H V .
L O S IE W IC Z . deceased, File
Number fl-410. It pending In the
C irc u it Court tor Seminole
County. Florida, Prabeto Divi­
sion. the address af which is
Seminole County Caurtheuea,
Sanford. Florida n m .
The name and addreaa af the
at public aalo. to the highest and
bast btdder far cash, at Me Btost
front dear af the Seminole
County Courthouse. Sanford.
FNrtda. af 11&gt;88a jn . on Me S*to
day of January, im .
WITNESS my hand and affictol tool of said Court this list
day af December, was. .
(Court Soot)
MARVANNR MORSE
O arBatM tO rajitCourt

W I T H I N T H E L A T E R -O P
T H R E E (9) MONTHS A F T E R
T H E O A T S O P T H E FIR ST
P U B L I C A T I O N O F T H IS

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SffSU81

% iffiS A 3 r

o ,n M
N I E D EO REES SS M IN U TE S W ’■OP-WAV L IN E OP U 4 . NIEffWAV D A
I F E E T FOR A PO IN T OP B E EW N IN B .
IL W ITH T H E SOUTH U N B OP LOT to.
8 E M M PARK, A PI STANCE OF 0344
t* O SER SES V M IN U TES W « 8847
M D E R B IE S df M IN U TES W.. ID to
POE BRERS M M IN U TES • SECONOS
! RUN S. N D EG R EES St M IN U TES W..
IM at 08 D EG R EES ■ M INUTES «
IT. T IIE N CE RUN SOUTHW ESTERLY
CAVE SO UTH EA STER LY HA VINO A
i C E N TR A L AN G LE OP N D E B B IE S f t
CHOBO BEABIN O OF S. IIO E O B S E S

v/i iv 1.35

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Legal N otlcf
PUBLIC N O TIC E
U S. ENVIR ONM ENTAL PR O TEC TIO N A O EN CY
Region IV, Water Permit* and Enter cement Branch
341 Court land Street, NE
Atlanta. Georgia 303*1
D A TE : December 30, tffl F U I ^ N O T I C E NO.CWA-IVWSOJ
N O TIC E O F PROPOSED A D M IN ISTR A TIV E P E N A L TY
ASSESSMENT AND O P P O R TU N ITY T O CO M M ENT
This I* to give notice that U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(E F A ) Raglan IV, Is proposing to assess an administrative penalty
tor the following facilities. Any parson wishing to comment an tha
proposed penalty mu*t submit written comments lb tha Regional
Hearing Clark Identified below within thirty (31) days of fho data of
Ms nottca and serve a copy of the comments upon each party. Tha
Raipcndant may request a Hearing within twenty (to) day* at
receipt of tha notice, sent by certified mall, by tending a written
request tor a Hearing to:
Raglan Hearing Clark
U.S. E F A . Raglan IV
34SCourtland Street. NE
Atlanta. Georgia 303*1
(404)347 3*41
It the Respondent requests a Hearing, than those persona who have
commented during the thirty (to) day comment ported will bo
notified of tha Hearing and may appear at the Hearing to present
^ nw
wwd|AM|f NREBBEfllBill
etkwtico on nw ^ iro p riE iifW ii w
The final Administrative Penalty Order will bo issued after cieae of
too thirty (SI) day comment parted unless a public hearing Is
requested by tha Respondent requiring a delay In Nsuanca af fho
final order. The final order will be effective thirty (to) days after
af the proposed penalty order may be obtained tram the
iIon Office at tha addreaa listed above or by contacting Ms. Susan
J . Papa at (444)147 7430. Tha Administrative Record. Including
Information submitted by the Respondent, ti on file at Iho EP A offko
tdmtifted above. The flN will bo open tor public Inspection between
•:S0a.m. and 4:00p.m.. Monday through Friday.
E F A commenced...............wing
the followingCUClou II
asoossmont of ponaltlos:
I. In tha matter at tha Sanlands Utllltloe Corporation. I
Florida) E F A deckel No. CWA-IV 83-883, the U.S. E F A . Raglan IV,
propose* to ****** an admlnlstratlvo penalty of 04A70140 tor
discharging pollutants from Its wostowotor trootmont system Into
water* of the United State* In violation af National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (N PD ES) Permit No. F 1403*211.
Issued pursuant to Sad Ian 401 of the Clean Water A d . Tha
Respondent wo* Issued NPDES Permit No. F 14030211 tor IN
discharge* Into Swastwatar Crook. Spodftcelty. the Sanlands
Utllltta* Corporation exceeded the affluent limitation* af NPOES
Permit No F 14033*11 by falling to meat tha Chronic Whole Effluent
toxicity (W E T ) limitation tor tha Cartedspbeia debts, as notod In
W E T tests performed in July tffl, and January and March tffl. The
facility atse failed to perform additional W E T tost* In the timetrams
required by the permit tor tha unacceptable chronic toskity found In
tha July tffl and January tffl W E T tost*.
Publish: Oocambor 10. tffl
DEZ-tfO

N O TICE OP C H A N O I OF LAN D U S E / A M IN D M IN T
TO COM PREHENSIVE PLAN
PUBLIC HEAR INO T O BE N ELO
JA N UA R Y a, i m
Notice Is hereby given that the Seminole County Local Land
Planning Agsnty/Plannlng and Zoning Commission (LPA/PAZ) will
conduct a public hearing on January a. tff3. beginning at 0:M p.m..
or aa seen thereafter aa poaeJbie. In the County Servkas Building
IN I East First Street. Sanford. F L . Roam tea (the Board
Chambers). The purpose1of this hearing N to receive public Input.

�'AVt'

8anford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, December 30, 1992 - TA

A poactful and qulat salting
Contra) Park, In front of tha Laht Mtry City Hall,
b « the
th# acting
100 W. Laka Mary Blvd., will b#
Batting for
city sponsored tvtn tB r e wall a* offartd for rant

for w«ddlngs or other prlvatt gatherings during
19*3.

NOTICE OF
FO RR CLM USR SALE
NOTICE I* htrtby givwi that
tha undarttgnad dark el the
C ircu it Court el Seminole
County, Florida, will on January
It. i m , at tl:M o’clock A M. at
the Watt Front door of the
Seminole County Courthowte In
Sanford. Florida, otter tar tale
and eetl at public outcry to the
hlfhett end beet bidder tar cash,
the followingdetcrlbed property
iltuate In Seminole County,
Florida'
Lot 4, Block O, CARRIAGE
H ILL UN IT TWO. a luMIvltlon,
according to the plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book is. Page*
14 and IT. at the Puttie Record*
at Seminole County, Florida,
pureuant to the Final Judgment
entered In a cate pending In m M
Court, the tfyta of which It

Court are rogulted to file thetr
eblectlont with title Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
TH R E E MONTHS A F TE R T H E
D ATE O F T H E FIR ST PUBLI­
CATION O F TH IS N O TICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A F TE R TH E
O A T S O F SER V ICE O F A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM .

AN crodhoco af the Wcidnt
andether pocoonoharing clairm

inomivo wuw.

WITNESS my hand end of
tlclal seal Ol takl Court this H it

Officials say highway
deaths hit 30-year low
safest year on the highways In three decades,
federal offlcUla say. as deaths and drunken
driving are down and use of seat belts la up.
Transportation Department officials projected
Tuesday that when 1993 la over. 39.000 people
w ill have died In motor vehicle accidents — the
lowest death toil since 1962.
Th e y also expect the fatality rate baaed on total
miles driven to continue the annual decline It
began a .decade ago. dropping one-tenth of a
percentage point to 1.8 deaths per 100 million
miles of vehicular travel.
"W e're talking about the lowest fatality rate in
history. It's something we all should celebrate."
•aid Marlon Blakey. administrator of the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Officials attributed m uch of the decline to
Increased use of seat belts, encouraged through
new state laws and stepped up police enforce­
m ent. and a decrease tn the Incidence of
alcohol-related traffic deaths. Th e y did not find

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT,

any decrease in speed.
Baaed on figures for the first six months of the
year, highway safety officials project alcohol
Involvement In 45.8 percent of vehicle fatalities In
19B3. Th a t would be down significantly from 48
percent last year, and continues i decline from
over 57 percent In 1983.
Th e rate motorists and their passengers used
seal belts Increased to 63 percent nationally,
based on- the findings of surveys within each
state. Th a t was up from B9 percent In 1991 and
just 10 percent a decade ago.
and aaN at public outcry to tha
MfhMt •Ml iin f M M vr for dflfi*

"There truly has been a sea change for the
better on seat belts," said Transportation Secre­
tary Andrew H . Card J r .
Total deaths by motor vehicles has been on the
decline since 1988, when the toll was 47.067. Th e
1903 total. If it holds up. would m ark a B percent
decline from Last year's 41,463deaths.

aMwtaMtoVwnInoi? County,

County. Florida,
pursuant to Rto Final Ju
antorsd to p a m pandbg
Court, tba ttyta of w

Th e annual toll hasn't been below 40,000 since
1963. Th e record high w as54.589In 1973.
Officials say the recession can he a factor, as
people lend to travel leas and highway deaths
tend to decline during tight times.

WITNESS my bw d
ttatot &lt;Ml W aaa* Court
dayafO iw mbar. tart.
(COURT M A L I
- 1M ARYANNE MORSE

La* It, Stock A
LAKE ESTATES, n
Ftot Snk K Faso
Fubtlc Ruarda at

(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
■y: Jana E. Joeowtc
Daputy Clock
PuMlih: December 30,
January e. IF**
OEMS*

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO rR A N D LV N K . RAMOS
MAILINO ADDRESS:
U U Santa Barbara (A E -U ),
FFO A A M M J
RESIDENCE! Unknown
you A RE N O TIFIE D that an
action ta tarndova a marigaga
an ttw tallowing propurty In
SEMINOLE County, Florida.
L O T I I . ALO M A R IN D
TR A C T Ml. ACCORDINO TO
T H E F L A T TH ER EO F AS R E­
CORDED IH F L A T ROOK W,
FAQES U . 11 M i U . PUBLIC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
COUNTY, FLORIDA,
baa boon Iliad agalnat you and
F E L IX L. RAMOS and yww a n
rasulrad to aanrn a capy ol your
written dataniaL If any. to It on
CHARLES R. OEOROfi. Ill,
LAW O FFIC E OF CHARLES R.
OSOROR, Ml, P JL , FM n tU fi
attemly, wbaaa mailing addrou
ta 111 Norib Oransa Annua,
Suita I R S F A I W MO* Or
lands. Florida BOB. an or ba­
to n tha nib day N January 1WJ
and tlta Nw original with tha
d a rk of Sda Court atlhar batata
Ml» |»4|Mr*
i P t HI wi nenYVFvrftOTfvm
vy*r

DON'T BE A SINKER

3 patents Issued lor mouse strains
W A S H IN G TO N CAP) - Unlike
most inventions recognised by
the government, patent num ­
bers 5.175.383 and 5.175,384
and 5.175.385 can squeak, eat.
drink, mate end even wiggle
pink noses. Th e new patents are
mice mfidit by genetic manipula­
tion.
Th e U.S. Patent and Tirade-

been granted to Harvard Unlver, sity in C a m h rid jr, Mesa., Gen; Pharm International of Mountain
• View, Cahf.. and to Ohio Unlverl shy in Athens, Ohio,
t
T h e patent is the second
*, species ow nership for Philip
j Leder. a Howard Hughes re' searcher at Harvard. Leder and
colleagues developed the first
patented anim al, tfle "Harvard
m ouse." in 1986.

!

OenPharm was given a patent
for a mouse strain that has been
altered so it naturally fails to
University patent to

hum an gene that constantly
produces a low level of beta
Interferon, a protein that attacks
virus and prevents Infection In
the mouse.
A ll of the mice were altered
genetically through a technique
In which genes are changed In
fertilised eggs that then are
allowed to gestate w ith in a
m other mouse. Th e resulting
pups have, a genetic pattern
different from either parent.
W hen the pupa m ature and
mate, their offspring carry the

animal patents are significant for
the Industry.
"Since Harvard University re­
ceived the firs t tra n sg e n ic
animal patent In 1988, there has
been continued debate about
Raines* statement. "Th is ... de­
cision marks e positive step
forward for protecting Important
U .8. research."
Th e 1988 Harvard mouse eras
genetically altered so that 11
predictably developed cancer.
Iifd rr said the pmststfi mouse,
which he said may be called
Harvard (I, w ill be Important In

research on the enlargement of
the pmatate tn older man. H u
prostate, a gland that produosa
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tip bladder and around the tuba
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Th e gland grows larger as men
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W ith a mouse that "»«■»«"■ the
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Th e OenPharm mouse was
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�BA - S,inford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday. December 30. 1992

U.S. troops, secret service prepare for Bush
By REID Q. MILLER

Associated Press Writer
M O G A D ISH U . S o m a lia A m erican tro o p s am i S ecret
Service personnel rushed today
to prepare for the New Year's
visit of President Hush to one of
the most chaotic, lawless tow ns
on earth.
Razor wire harriers were being
strung .it the sties Hush will visit
lu Mogadishu, sand hags were
being placed around new gun
pits and m achine gun posts and
M arines w ere e x te n d in g and
tightening their control.
"We are very concerned about
the president's security when he
visits here." said Marine Col.
Fred Peek. "1 doubt II any
Am erican president has ever
visited a nation in such turmoil
and such a state of anarchy ....
"W e are doing everything we
can to assure Ids safety ."
Neither the m ilitary nor the
Secret Service would elaborate
on their plans.
On Tuesday. American troops
s e iz e d a s ix - s to r y b u ild in g
known as America House across
the street from the lonner U.S
Em bassy, a ransacked, partially
destroyed com pound now hous­
ing Marine headquarters.
Hush is to visit flic em bassy
shortly after his arrival at m id­
day on New Year’s Eve and
Marines who have been su b ­
jected to erratic sniper lire from
America House, once the home
of em bassy employees, decided
to clear if mil
"We have been sniped at trom
t hat lo c a tio n on m a n y o c ­
casions." Peek said.
Peek said a small cache of
weapons was found In America
House. Including an reeollless
rifle, a num ber of rille propelled
grenades and am m unition.
A m uch larger cach e was
s e i z e d In n o r l h e a s i e r n
M o g a d is h u , a n a r e a n e w ly
patrolled by Marines north of the
line that divides the city Into
fiefdoms controlled by two rival
warlords
Peek said that cache contained
two 105 mm how itzers, ten
.50-eallber m achine guns, two
missile launchers, ten 80 mm
m o r ta r s a n d m a n y s m a lle r
weapons.
Som alis on the streets of the
capital were eager to welcome
the U.S. president.
"T he world I* talking about
Somalia now." H ussen All Om ar.
21. a m ath teacher, said T u e s ­
day. “ Som ali people ure o p ­
tim ists. Hush Is trying to help
the Somali people."
"B u sh Is th e p resid e n t of
Somalia now ." said Mohammed
Abdt Faralt. 25. who said he was
a form er clothing salesm an.
In one of his lust foreign policy
decisions as p resid en t. Hush
ordered U.S. troops to lead un
International m ilitary force to
get food past looters In Somalia,
where civil war and drought
have com bined to kill 350.000.
About the only people who

aren't either expectant or happy
about tlie Hush visit are the
b an d its largely forced u n d e r­
g ro u n d In th e tow ns w here
U.S.-led tro o p s have set up
positions.
Military p lan e s dropped
lOO.(HM) leaflets on all parts of
M ogadishu on Tuesday w arning
resid en ts that looting, killing
and (lie display of almost any
kind of weapon "will not he
tolerated."
The leaflet w arned that a n y ­
one aim ing or pointing a weapon
at the troops lu Somalia will he
shot, the leaflet said lu what
Peek called "a rath e r direct

m e s s a g e g o i n g mil to
M ogadishu."
Hush was lo arrive T hursday
al M ogadishu's in le rn a llo n a l
airport, now a spraw ling m ilitary
base, alxiard an Air Forre C-141
cargo plane from .Icddnli. Saudi
Arabia.
lie was to lie greeled there by
Marine Gen. Robert Jo h n sto n ,
the com m ander nl Ihc m ultin a­
tional force In Somalia, then be
whisked by helicopter to llu*
form er em bassy, where lie was
lo Informally talk to Marines.
The president also was lo visit
a hospital run by Ihc Internallnnnl ('om m illee of the Red

C ro s s b efore s p e n d in g New
Y ear's Eve aboard the U.S.S.
T r i p o l i off l h e c o a s t of
Mogadishu.
On New Year's Day. Hush was
lu visit Am erican troops and an
orphanage In Haidoa. an im por­
tant aid distribution point In the
In te rio r, a n d th e U.S. 10th
Mountain Division's h e a d ­
q u arters lu Hell Dugle.
D e s p i t e I hi* p r e s e n c e o f
th o u s a n d s of foreign troops,
there are dally reports of looting,
t h r e a t s a g a i n s t fo re ig n a id
w orkers am i Journalists, and
si mmiIi mis betw een rival elans In
Mogadishu-

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�8N

December

WEDNESDAY

Sanford H om ld

1992

Still around and kicking

BRIEF

Seminoles
rebound for
second win

Daly drops off tour
P O N TE VED R A - In an action unprecedented
In the sport. 1991 POA champion John Daly has
withdrawn from early tournaments on the 1993
POA To u r to “ pursue counseling Immediately
for an alcohol-re iated problem. ‘*
“ I w ill check Into an alcohol rehabilitation
facility and will return to tournament play only
when I am comfortable jpy life Is In order.'* the
36-year-old Daly said In a joint statement with
POA To u r commissioner Deane Be man.

KISSIM M EE - Th e y did It again.
Alter having gone nearly two
years without a win, the Seminole
High School boys' soccer team won
for the second time In as m any days
Tu e a d a y a fte rn o o n , d efeating
Btuart-South Fork 2-1 In a Central
Florida Challenge consolation game.
E a rlie r In the gay. Seminole
suffered a 3-1 setback at the hands
of New Port Richey-Gulf In the
tournament quarterfinals.
Th e Tribe was scheduled to play
the w inner of Tueaday night's
Klaalm m ee-Oateway/Vero Beach
lam e this m orning at 10 a.m . at
BUver Spurs Stadium for a berth In
this afternoon's 3 p.m . consolation
bracket final.
Regardless of what happens to­
day, Seminole coach Carlos Merllno
is thrilled with the way his team has
responded to a variety of new

Rice questionable
MIAMI — Miami leading scorer Qlen Rice has
tendinitis In his right ankle and Is questionable
for tonight's matchup with the Chicago Bulls.
A decision w ill be made later today on
whether Rice and two other Injured teammates
will be able to play.
Keith Aaklns has a bruised right shin and
Brian Shaw has tendinitis In his right knee.

*Canes tumbla
MIAMI - Tim Shaw scored 26 points to lead
North Carollna-W llm lngton over Miami 88-73.
Reggie Veney added 16 points. Including a
game-ending reverse dunk, as W ilm ington (6-1)
earned Its fourth consecutive victory.
Michael Gardner scored 18 points and had five
steals to lead Miami (2-6). Steve Edwards added
16 and 7-3 center Constantin Popa 13.

Top 25 matchup In Miami

..vS

30,

MIAMI — Desma Thom as scored 18 points to
lead six Miami players In double digits as the
Hurricanes defeatedI Appalachian
&lt;.........................
State 80-63 in
the second round of the!
the Miami Holiday Classic.
Th e game was tied 33-33 at the half after
Appalachian State's Beth Kilby beat the b utter
with a 3-pointer. Kilby finished with 11 points,
while Reflpna Ikard led Appalachian State (4-4)
with 16 points and six rebounds.
'
Della Wilson had 16 points and six assists for
Miami, while Holly RiUnger had 14 points and
seven rebounds. Vicki Plowden added 12 points
and a game-high nine rebounds. Carla Harris
chipped In 11 points.
No. 22 Miami (3-1) now advances to the
tourney championship game Wednesday, taking
on No. 11 Texas Tech (7-1).
Tech aadvanced as Sheryl Swoopes scored six
Points in the final 61 seconds to hold oIt Florida
points

^ r o r c .^ u ^ .r ,o ir r P
,.?',as?i; s ^ &amp; f s s ? s

Rams, ’Hounds in semifinals
Byl

Hamid Corraapondant
ORLANDO - For the sixth-ranked Lake Mary High
School boys' soccer team. Tuesday's Plata H ut
Invitational showdown against Coconut Creek was filled
with many positives, not the least of which was the
score— 3-0 In favor of the Rama.
Lake Mary limited the Cougars to Just nine shots on
goal and To n y Battle came through with two goals as
the Rama advanced to this afternoon's 4 p.m.
against Clearwater Central Catholic (a 3-0 winner over
Daytons Beach-Seabreexe Tuesday night) at Edgewster
High School
pleased w ith the way we played
'I
« up m any chances,1' said Ram coach Larry
’It was a tremendous effort at the defensive
Today’s other semifinal pRa Lym an (which hung on
to be atTam pa-Leto 3-1 at Btohop Moor* Tuesday righ t)

.ifttcjrpi
'

Kirkland
Albenat Bransova scored 30 points, plus
_
10 rebounds, while Andrea Nagy added
16 points for Florida International (5*3).

Gators finish third
E L PASO. Texas — Florida's Brian Thompson
scored 14 points. 10 In. the second half, to lead
the Gators to an 8 6 6 2 victory over Austin Peay
lor third place In the Sun Carnival Classic.
No. 13 Purdue, which defeated Florida 67-63
Monday, beat Texas-El Paso In the champion­
ship game. U TE P beat Austin Peay 77-56.
Florida (5-3) led throughout the game and by
as much as 28 points with 10:52 remaining.
Austin Peay foils to 3 6 .

Akron routs FAU

.

NSW R O C H ELLE. N .Y. - Mark Alberta scored
17 points and Chris Richardson added 14 to
Akron (4-3) over Florlda-Atlantlc 00-40
I place In the Iona Classic.
Iowa defeated Wagner for the championship
In the second game.
David Cargill and Rob Ritter* topped Florida
Atlantic (1-9) w ith 11 and 9 points, respectively.

‘ to s shootout) to a rem atch o f * :
state semifinal game at 8 -pad.-aft Btohop Moore High
School.
In other actlou Tuesday at Btohop Moore Memorial
Stadium. Lake Howell
* “
‘
Boone 4-3 to
At Edgewster High School Tuesday. Oviedo endured
a tough, physical pontest to overcome D r. Phillips l O to
n losers' bracket rontrsl.
Mary heeled Cocount
Creek. W inter Bark eliminated Edgewster 4-1, and
Clearwater Central Catholic blanked Seabreeae.
While the Cougars managed to play with the 1j *ti&gt;
Mary to the ftrsthalf. they etlll trailed l O at
Beisnowakt knocked to the game's first aoo
aoare on an
from Jo d y DeBruto, who finished the contest with
t v o p H M

| M

a p

Beetle, a ju n io r midfielder, extended the Rams' lead
with a goaf 12 minutes Into the second half, also on
assist from DeBruto. Beetle put the game out of reach
when he fielded a free kick and put It peat goalie Mitch
Amsterdam with 11 «"&lt;«««♦— rem aining
White MoCorkte would like his squad to take home
the Plssa H ut title — eomethlng a Sem inole County
team has not done since Lake Mary to 1988 — he views
the final two games as a erto-wto situation.
. “Thte to Just a great opportunity for us," MoCorkte
aald. “Th e w o n t we can do la fourth place. W han you
play OCC (Central Clearwater Catholic) o r f *

you're going to get a great game. Regardless of the
result. It wtUbe p o sitiv e . We need this kind of game."
McCorkle's sentiments were echoed later In the day
and at the other tournament she by Lym an coach Ray
pleased If not satMfled with the
Oreyhounds' 2-1 victory over Tampa-Leto
"W e played a lot better tonight than we did
“ ■aid
yesterday."
‘ BandJdge. whose team was ranked No.
2 In the moat recent Florida A thletic Coaches
4A state poll. “ Leto it a good team.
I'm a Uttle unhappy that we gave up a goal late and
we fre e away too m any fouls, but
goodchai
Danny M cAvoy con verted a penalty kick at 164)8 for
a 1-0 Lym an lead. Chad Courtney doubted the lead
when be took a paaa from John Scott and ripped a shot
Leto (4 4 ) cut'the toad to half on B rta n Holiopgti ^
i minutes rem aining In the i
W ith tbiVUM M *. the t H M r W m T a ir n ^
winter to the Class 4A state semifinals, the last toes
suffered by the Oreyhounds (10-0-2).
wars the irfwds of gomea they needed as well. Th e
Patriots (7-3*3) also played a flat aeoond half in
Monday's first-round w in over Boone, but Tuesday
W hile Lake Brantley had nine shots on goal to the
secood half, moat of the action was at their end of the
field as Chiefs pressed for the tying goal, which they got
when Scott Pearson threaded a pass to Lee Pearson,
who knocked It past 'keeper Sean Seaver from two
yards out with 9:41 left to play.
•
In the shootout, Sean McClaflerty. Mika Johnston,
and Jeff Thorton all converted their penalty kicks, but
Chief goalkeeper Trevor McCarthy saved two of the
Patriots' last three attempts to put Chamberlain to the
semifinals.
“ We're losing Intensity." aald Patriot head coach Jim
Brody. "We did a Utile better Job getting It back today
than we did yesterday. It's something we re got to try to
solve. 1 think we can solve lb It's not an unstoppable
Jim MetetUdls put the Patriots ahead 1-0 0:35 Into
1th a 13-yard bullet that got past McCarthy.
Laka HoweU (4-4-2). E ric Morse knocked a

" I 'v e been n o th in g b u t im ­
pressed ." M erllno said. "E v e n
though we're kind of thin on the
bench. I think we're getting better
with each passing game. It's been a
great experience for the kids.
“ Last year, we played a total of 13
games. We've already played 10
this year and we still have six weeks
to go. It was a new experience for
the kids to play two gomes In one
day. It's been like fam ily day.
having to spend all day together.
You get to know people a little
hfttfr In *1tuition* )!■** »ha*-“
W hile one of Merllno's goals was
to have his team face new competi­
tion. they ended up playing the
same team two daya to a row. On
Monday, the Trib e registered their
first w in to two years by beating
Stuart-South Pork on penalty kicks.

Seminole got the Job
Aral half, the Seminoles took a 1-0
lead on 8am Earl's unassisted goal.
South Fork equalised w ith a goal to
the 63rd minute.
Chria McKIbbto. a 6-foot, 4-toch
senior, netted the game-winner for
Seminole at 72:42. He took a corner
kick from n *n U l W hite, headed the
ball to hto foot and volleyed It home.
Seminole (2 4 ) outahot South Fork
30-13. Tribe goalie Jo n W illiams
came up with seven saves while hto
South Fork counterpart made four
stops. South Fork (6-7-1) had a 5 4
edge to corner kicks.
Ben Brown scored the only Semi­
nole goal In the 3-1 lose to New Port
R Ic h e y -O u lf Tu e a d a y m o rn in g ,
breaking the shutout at 73:10. Q ulf
outahot Seminole 32-14. forcing
W illiam s to make nine saves. The
Trib e had a 4-2 advantage to corner
Oulf. ranked fifth to the Florida
Athletic Coaches Association's Class
3A state poll. Improved to 9-3.

Tribe cagers bounce back in coneolatlon round
6-toch Harrison. who popped In 31 In the victory
over Mariner.
•
A lio scoring In double figures for the winners,
now 11-1 on the eeaeoa. wee shooting guard
Sandra Clem m ons, w ho tallied 10 points.
IwrtmUwg a p Ir o f t h ree pointers.
Th e trib e was led b y senior star Nikki
Washington, who had 38 points, seven blocked
shots, six assists and five steals. For good
measure ehe also bucketed a pair of three-point
bomba. Also playing well were Tennlshla Eason

In the afternoon game, hi
points (33), rebounds (13).

and M indy Hampton

&gt;•

•.

! J7«30 p.m. — SUN . NBA.

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E OF S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H f S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

*-• ' •*. &gt;*-

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S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
Taoaday mutt*
F l n l r o c o - 1/10. Oi 11.70
4Mickey'* Chotl
- MOO 3 M 330
3 Summ Good Guru
1.40 440
3 Roy Throthor
340
Q 11413440 POO-II0340 T 10-031M I4 I
Second roc* — l/R Oi 11.44
4 Ploy Do M ink
3741 040 440
J Scar lei Warlord
340 140
J Jimmy Sorenton
440
Q &lt;141 St.40 P &lt;0-110040 T 10-01) 11740 0 0
&lt;4 411H.401 &lt;0-1-3-All 11100.70
TMrdroco — 1/tO.Ci 3141
} Randy Newman
140 340 341
J SI Michael
1130 440
1Last Relume
04.40
Q 111) 1140 P &lt;1-3117.30 T (001) 11040
Fourth roca — 1/10. Bi 3143
IMadalltl
13.30 SaO 340
i Bectoob Wilma
041 440
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340
O &lt;4-114140 P (14) 7040T tt-041 SM40
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1040 1.00 340
4 Dory* Sendona
140 340
IGk'aGeorpo
140
Q ( M l 3740 P ( M l 104.H-T (0-4-1131340
S4*th r a c e - 0/14. Oi 31.70
I Summ Campaign
1340 S40 340
I Burner Trouble*
4.40 340
iCrtTw IalodSIt
140
0 (1411140 P (1-0) M 40 T (1-0-3) 03S40
SironHl toco — S/30. A i l l 4S
IRaolOona
S40 1.40 340
7Summ Vary Marry
740 341
30ta Baity
140
0 (07) 47.00 P (07) 7040 T (0-7-13 030400
(07-00) 104040

MIAMI M. APPALACHIAN IT.00
APPALACHIAN I T . ( M l
Creaky 4-4 M I. Lynch I I 01 X Ifcord 7-11
13 I*. Refcoraon M l 0 0 1 IfWCi r 13 00 I.
Kartoata* 04 M A Kitty M M It. Burpoaa
M 00 f. P o m O l M 0. OoMa I t 00 t.
Crowo PS 1-3 ?. T o M t t o n M 4 03.

M. Mory'i. Col, 01, Amortcon U. S3
NaR at Porno Oooatc

MIAMI (PI)

Horrlt SO 40 11 . Tttomoo M O il 10.
PtooBm 013 00 II. RHMOOr O il 07 14.
Wllaon 0 10 04 10. Mltctwll 0 1 0 0 A OtMn 00
1-4 I. McOorry 01 0 0 A Tontlllo 01 01 A
io n n 0 1 1 4 1. Wataen 0 1 0 1 A T.Vowtf »•*
O OtC.Younf 11011. To lM l1741004100
Halftimo— Appalachian &gt;1. 33, AUoml 33.
3 Point pooh SopMocMoA U . 0-10 (Karl
Orltt 14. KIMy 1 A Lyndi I I, Nokonan I S.
Ikard 01, I pencar O il, AUaml J 10 (Wllaon
M , Horrlt t-A Alllnoof 141. Foulod o w lCroafcy. Rokouftda— Appalachian I I . 37
(ILord 01, Mioml 4* (P lan dan 0). Aaalata—
Appalachian St. IS (Sponcar 0). Mioml II
(W IN K 0). Totol tool*— Appalachian II. 17.
Mioml 17. Tadmicai— Lynch. a — 337. .

W. Kentucky 7A Beaton U.W
A U B W IIT
Akron OA Auatlo Pooy 03
AouinatOl, Kolomoaoo 43
W. MtcMfon 77, PotrlNMOf
WaoAOum 07, Alaoko-Anchaeaft I
TOUBNA4AC44TO
AoOoro B M Ooaaic
Fleet Boond
Aukum 74. Furman 01
Wta.-MHwaukoa 70. Jockaan I). &gt;3

Vininlo 77, N.C. Chartottt 74
Vanderbilt 17, Connecticut 37
LadyBotarClooak

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C L R V IL A N O IN D IA N !
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MINN B IO TA T W IN ! - /
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Cook of the Week

IN B R I E F

Usher in new year with soul food from Bea’s kitchen

TOPS open houM m « tonight
TO PS (Take off Pounds Sensibly) w ill hold a special open
house to honor Its HOPS members at the regular meeting
today, at 6:30 p.m ., in the recreation room of West Lake
Hospital. 580 Highway 434, Longwood. For Information, call
869-8465.

Cunningham honorad
LO N G W O O D — Receptionist Johnnie Cunningham of
Maitland was honored as Employee of the Month forr November
at Village on the Oreen in Longwood.
She has been at the com m unity, where she does accounts
receivable, greets guests and assists residents, for two and
one-half years.
She received a commemorative plaque and Is now eligible to
be named Employee of the Year.

Council of the Blind to moot
OR LAND O - Th e M id-Florida Council of the Blind w ill hold
its January meeting on Saturday, Ja n . 2 at the Colonialtown
Recreational Center at the com er of Fem Creek and Lake
Highland.
Vice president Denyse Eddt w ill speak on the subject of "New
Year. Challenge or Chore."
For more information, call Nadia Schenk at 671-7779. For
advice on transportation, call Lourene Gideons at 843-3767.

Hospital hooto Nor-Anon
Nar-Anon, a support group open to families and friends of
addicts, meets every Wednesday, at 8 p.m ., at West Lake
Hospital, 589 W . State Road434, Longwood. Phone:260-1900.

Aoroblcs offorod
Th e C ity of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m .
Cost Is 83 per class.
Instructor is Debbie Black, board certified w ith over 10 years
experience.
Call 330-5697 for more details.

Dancing for annlort
Th e Over 50 Dance Club dance is held every Wednesday,
from 2:30 •4:30 p.m . at the Sanford Civic Center. Live music
by the Deltonlans 11-piece band. Donation 82.00.

Nar-Anon to meet

5 eggs

2 tap. vanilla flavoring

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n t f iq worms
ponotm__________

Preheat oven to 350°. Boll
sweet potatoes until soft. Peel
while still warm and place in
large bowl. Mash potatoes until
consistent. Add sticks of butter
while potato m ixture la still
warm . Stir until butter to melted
and mixed In. Add sugar a little
at a time while stirring. Add eggs
one at a time to m ixture until
fairly smooth. Add the flavoring
and then m ix with m ixer to
rem ove any strings. M ixture
should be smooth.

Now. that the holidays are
over, m any people have eaten s
variety of rich foods and are
ready for more simple fare to
usher in the new year. Soul food
speaks for itself at this time. And
who knows better how to pre­
pare this type food than o u r
Cook of the Week?
When the name Bernice Baker
(no relation to correspondent), a
M idway resident for 62 yean. Is
mentioned in the company of
other longtime Seminole County
residents, moat w ill ray they
remem ber the delectable "soul
food" that w m prepared and
■old In her restaurant, “ Country
Kitchen." for IB years. Since
dosing the restaurant, which
was located In the M idw ay
co m m u nity, she still enjoys
cooking for he r fa m ily and
various church functions.
Th e mother of seven children.
23 grandchildren (at last count),
and m any great-grandchildren,
Mrs, Baker waa honored by the
Sanford Herald as "M other of the
Year."
"C om ing from a fam ily of
talented cooks and having to
prepare meals for m y own fam ily
made cooking a natural for m e/'
•aid Orandm a Bea, m she ta
affectionately known by friends
and relatives. Because she does
not measure ingredients when
her

PfaCruat:
1 one-lb. bag of plain flour
1 cup of Crtoco shortening
Whole m ilk (enough to make
moist)
C u t Crtoco Into flour until
crum bly. Add m ilk until moist.
Roll out 8 pieces on cutting
board and puce each into pie
pans.
Pour sweet potato pie filling
Into each crust and bake In
preheated oven for 45 minutes

MASTtMEUf
SAVINGS ON
GREATNEW
for large fam ily gather-

accurate measurements of the
Ingredients used in Mrs. Baker's
recipes below. Mrs. Baker said.
"These homemade recipes

i following recipes are from
k'a "K itchen."
6 W E S T P O T A T O P tE
(makes

about 5 plea)
4-5 faige sweet potatoes
2 cans of evaporated m ilk
2 sticks of butter
2(4 cupa of sugar

Nar-Anon meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m . at West Lake
Hospital, 589 West State Road 434. Longwood. Nar-Anon is a
support group open to families and friends of addicts. Dally
living with an addict is more turm oil than you can handle by
yourpelf- Jo in for support in coping w ith your addict: gain
serenity to make derisions and put your life back in focus. Call
260-1900 for more information.

Give leftovers creative
touches to add interest

Omni Toastmasters gather

When the holidays are over
but the refrig erator to still friU,
add creative touches to leftovers
so the second
around to m
as the first,
go much
‘
It to

Th e O m ni Toastmasters Club w ill gather at 5:30 p.m . every
Thursday at the Old Lake M ary C ity Hall. 158 Country Club
Road, Lake M ary. . . .
*y.
Call Sam Ryan a t871*2858 for more Information.

rated m ilk , tu rk e y o r
i for the ham . and carrots
and cauliflower for some of the
broccoli.

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*299

rsg. *499

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MYCOFF

Th is recipe .m akes, a,, large
casserole th a t ls W M for a
brunch buffet or luncheon . Lef­
tover tu rke y o r chicken no
longer tastes leftover w hen
transformed Into this special

TU1KBT C A M B IO L I
2 cupa hot water
2 Thq&gt;. butter or margarine
1 pkg. (6.25 ox.) quick cooking
long grain and w iki rice m ix
3 cu p s cu b e d t u r k e y o r
f»h lr»W »n

□

2 cupa froxen French-style

lTb s p .flo u r
Vfctap. M il

1 can (12 ox.) evaporated m ilk
1V4 cupa julienne ham atrtpa
U cup Parmesan cheese
V4 lap. nutmeg
Cook fcttucdni m directed on
package. Drain, rlnae and eet
aside. Com bine onion, garlic,
and butler in 2-quart casserole.
M icro w a ve on 100 pe rcen t
power, uncovered, 114-2 minutes
or until Just about tender. 8 tir in
mushrooms end b fo w o li Cover
wtth casarrolr lid. Microwave on
100 percent 214*3 minutes o r
until vegetables are tender-crisp.
S t ir In fo u r, a a lt, p e p p e r,
e va p o ra te d m ilk and b a m .
M icrowave (100 percent) un­
covered. 7-8 minutes or until
m ixture boils stirring once. Stir
in P a r m e s a n c h e e s e a n d
i nhm | .
Arrange fcttucctni on serving
plate. To p wtth sauce m ixture,
toss lig h tly . M icrowave 100
p e r c e n t u n c o v e r e d , 114*2
minutes o r untl heated through.
About 6 servings. Half and Half
ca n be su b stitu te d fo r the

fm a+howrTV MUnw, aw UBSUM nagMlmM FiMay, Dm . M, KM

MMBBf

260-1300

Party New Y u rt Eve at

L iv e

9(00 PM •2:00 AM
E n ter ta in m en t fr o m "PUSH 1

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From Your Friends

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�OS - 8— ford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, December 30, 1002
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CLASSIFIED ADS

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6 3 1 -9 8 9 3

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HOURS

14(

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MONDAY■—

SENATE PARTYRATES

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Son’s raging
a deeo concern

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71—Help Wanted

anot— a - _ j% o.
uranoo •
wrnwr Pant

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IS— I n —

OB COMPANY
wearBURUNOTON, IOWA

Requloltlon Engine#ra
Hon open so your eon w ill be
open and honeat with you.
m er it— in f Dtnn control wttn
young people who w e on the
verge o f becom ing sexually

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bf^MOflfl—fhOOflO—tVWi— CuetornarS—efacflon— Eia

; :. and he Im p a seem in g m e that
&amp; ;h e is n 't doin g a n y th in g
$ "w rong.*
•
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A bby. I reaHae that he is

Human Weeouroes Specialist

you have
Insanity \

neighborhood a p p a r
thought everybody on the

btttcriy

ELECTRIC

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N O y M M M fT N M
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1 cup shrpdded Cheddar

non rice
it s t Inch
h. Layer
nd water
Combine

water in blender or food pmcc—or. Prooe— until amaoth.
Transfer to 2-quart micro oafs
casserole, stir la remaining
water, b o u illon, turkey.

(100 percent) butter te n * ;
covered 4-cup ft— m so sum
*0-45 —rondo or until matlod«.(|
Mend In flour and boufllan. 8 t £ |
tern U lu Iflw ow avs o t l M |

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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. Dtctmb*r 30, 1092 K I T *N* C A R L Y L E ® by La rry W right

7T -H «1» Wanted

ER

157— M t M t o
N A VEL ORANOBS. Red Orope-

Poo.BBCMomnt.SMEEX
MANNY, Fell MUM. flexible
•che*&lt;te lerlchlldrw i. Expo
flM Ci. r it ir in c ii And Awn
t r Ani por t i t l on required.
Fleets CAN MAA. rr1 .1 M N A .

frilHt M 0 f t i l N N j N 4

!aM&lt;nVi K ^ r n r *

vlduAl, with strong donlAl
background. lor tomprehen
t l v o s u r g i c a l and rocontlrucllva pra d lco.
Scheduling, Inturanco. II'
nanclalt, and patient rotaliont
a mutt. Computer a plus.
Salary and bonotllt common•uralo with aaparlenco.

OIAJBdrm.Townhomet
e Sparkling Pool
• E idling Clubhouse
• Largo Eel In Kitchens
• Soli Cloonlng Oven*
O Wether*/Dryer* Avelleble

PAPIN IOUTI

iA C W IZ I. aoati 4, Maroon

MMjjM rjAAjjM jjj

u m m r u n iK i
Lake Ada I bdrm. U4S mo.
I bdrm, U N mo and up
A O C A R R I K N S . a woll
oi labllthod and growing
control Florida bated cam
pony oltort you:
0 Semi Annual Pay Incroatot
0 Stop Oil Pay
• Unloading Pay
• Vacation Pay
• lately Bonus
•Spouse Riding Program
•Average Trip $7 Days
• Late Model Conventional
Tractors
It you have l years tractor
trailer, OTR and snow and Ice
experience plus a good driving
recard, call:

ELECTRICIAN
Exp. Cooks
ChoorMor-Tfpo
Savors

I2MC70

m —Anttqvo/Clatslc

N IC I large 1 bdrm. I both,
central M/A. wather/dryer
hook ups. SUJ/mo plus securl
tv. Hall Realty. MS S»4

NUICK L IS A B R I C L A U lC

good 11y,oooOAO aam e:

dWKsasfc

m m m m BB3a

MSOdlS-OOOl
warranty, SI0JMMM1
p o r o V a im e r ~klt

Apply in Person: CrasyWings.

Htal.FroncN.MOim

Exp. Etoctfonk Tock
wash dryer. Owlet Off Lk
Mary Nlvd.SMwk.MP ires

SANFORD, roonsate to short
e«peases. M/F. Lg. bdrm
w/prlvale both Incl. TV.
phane. full house prtv. STO/wk
plus 1/3 util, and security.

t7— Aoartmttift

Lk. Mary custom bulll l/l, 3 car
garage. Llv. din. tarn. rma.
Fireplace, tec, system, SOS.SOO
Lk. Mary renovated Ilka new
l/l. garage, tented yd. SSO.MO

• ORIIIRR AND VANITY

h9Ut9e
SANFORD
complete privacy. I block
tram new hospital. SI 10 per
week plus 1330 security.
Call 333 3300

Call OWonotMl-HOI
iT

E S R

a t S t,

EMPLOYMENT

323-5170

R O V IV IIW - 3 bdrm.. 3 bath.
New carpet A paint. Family
rm., appliances, garage.
tSIS/me. SANFORD •3 bdrm.
I bath, toncad. carpeted. M l
CaXasW Beatty Sec, MS-3300

.s s r a ^ r
trim. NtCEl IMS 3N33M
LYMDSfTM R C U A M T •}

lPT,
s ........
I S I - N I U O i l MSI E l

ott. S3ts/me. see saei

,•1/1 Ptaerldgo Cleb. pool,
tennis d .. all appts.. Wash

Myer.SMOmo.sPMseO'i;t)W

N I C E CO ND O, w/opplt..
wash-dryer. Pins ridge Club.

■JVBtxstsstasz
1 water Md^opQ tortuBift Call
..ig r b ..4 * ,.* K N R

•arage. CHA. ig. rm*.. «tra
storage, i so mo. ■f SSOOsoc.
• S A N F O R D , S/l D u p l e .
w/Oarage. tern, patio. CHA.
all appts. S4J0 me. S4M tec.
0 D E N A R Y . l /l w/carport.
workshop, tern, porch, CHA,
lg. yd-. SAM mo. U M sec.
•LK. AAARY, S/t w/carport.
•tdalAa aSM^M
IaI
WnlllV M e lfV i voTTWr Ifi.
New paint A carpet. Clean.
SNA mo. SMI toe.
• M A Y F A I R VILLAS, l/l,
Prlvotol dbi. gorago. all
a p p ls .,« u t s ld o patio
w/pHvacy. lg. rma. SS3I me.

ty lC a llM lH M

9 C0

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:ccd

O IN IV A ■ Cute I bdrm. 1 both
In town, tiled family roam,
now roof/carpot. ssa.eoo
U M 31t/.loavo message

saaiec.

NO REALTY,

IN J O Y T N I COUNTRY A TM O SFN BR I ottered by this 3
bdrm. I bath w/lamlly rm. on
almost l/l acre I Raised potto
evertooktooktl.......A ...JUS0
L A R I MARY I bdrm. I both
w/tamlly room, central H/A.
fenced yard, garage, walk to
gelt course. SOI.MS Owner
financing with S IM M down.

K QBser

A nd Our Special Offer
Will Have You Laughing
AH The Way To The Bank.

WOg/mp. MOdlES, 3oo
• P M C T o ta n r f i e s t a .
H F m en . w/peeer HR

SJSSS RSIIMiflJiM

1*.I M i n i i h
A ll

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• S M E Y R h bass boot.

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\\ H a t h A p t s

Coevilla Apasrtmenta

etsos

Newly Renovated!

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&gt; T iti ir&gt;

CAU M YTHS

321-2720
322-2420

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eklS is m b L .

so tip

Oh s/koH if • K i m voMe

...

IS ,

No Craft? lad Cndft?
D iw m d ? la n k n D l?

C A N HELPI

K Z n g ln

CaaatoyUkeApS.

th e

deck Ilk

New Year

✓ Newly remodeled apta.
✓ One and two bedroom
✓ Ask about our 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 month leases
✓ Close to mqjor hwys.
and thoroughferes
2714 Ridgewood Aw,
*■
•Sanford
- :--"

LOW GASH Di____
LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS
CaN Our Hollina

321-7806
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- 8*nford Herald, 8anlord, Florida - Wdnssdsy, Dacsmbsr 30, 1982

■LON Dig

by Cflic Young
T
HIMOVLF. Ha

BK KTLKB AILKY
■
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V r f W n9

HOW SOLE
SAME, AIR ?

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by Mort Walktr
a t

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round x V e

HAP ALL YEA*/

TM « BORN LOSCR

b y A rt to n to m

r HCY(UMK.4UDi5! S M ^ *1 HtSM I RAY, t MHH (

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BRUTUS

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p m , M K DC MON

191

by Chariot M. Schult
7F3S

P IA N U T S
i f S P R E TTY COLD
c x rr..y o u ' r e s u r e
YOU W ANT TO 60
^ T O ^ U U A L K ? ___ _

W

■ IK A M IIK

O K A Y I'LL 6 E T

(

rIM LUCKY, N
W IL L SEE U S

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T O R H A D O &amp; .W U M O e S .

B U Z Z A R D ^ . AMD MOW
H U G t ASTOWOS HEADWG

Scleroderma diagnosed
by biopsy off tissues
D EAR DR. O O T T : Please prov l d e I n f o r m a t i o n on
scleroderma. What starts it and
how Is It treated?
D EAR READER: Scleroderma,
a chronic disease of unknown
cause, Is marked bv Inflamma­
tion and scarring of m any body
organs, notably the skin and
Joints, but also the Intestinal
tract, lungs, heart and kidneys.
The disease usually begins with
arthritis and swelling of die skin.
Later symptoms Include ulcere
o f th e f i n g e r s , d i f f i c u l t y
swallowing, shortness-of-breath.
Irregular pulse and fatigue (due
to kidney failure).
Scleroderma Is diagnosed by
biopsy of affected tissue.
The prognosis varies. Some
p a t i e n t s e x p e r i e n c e few
symptoms for years: in fact, the
disease may appear to stabilize
for extended periods, only to
progress eventually, for no
known reasons. On the other
hand, other patients exhibit
more rapid progression,
especially in the presence of
heart, lung or kidney manifesta­
tions. In severe cases, death
usually occurs from renal fail­
ure.
Because no single drug Is
effective In treating scleroderma,
doctors are forced to use sepa­
rate drugs to treat symptoms as
they arise: for example, calcium
c h a n n e l bl ockers for poor
c i r c u l a t i o n . T a g a m e t for
esophageal Inflammation, cor­
tisone for relief of arthritis and
Captopril for kidney damage.
Because scleroderma is sus­
pected to be an auto-lmmune
disorder. I am sending you m y
Health Report on “ Lupus: The
Great Im ita to r." w hich Is a
related disease. Other readers
who would like a copy should
send 91.25 plus a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 91369. Cleveland. OH
44101-3369. Be sure to mention
the title.
D EAR DR. O O T T : Can you
give me any Information on
L-lyslne? It Is supposed to pre(} * r
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by Jim Davit
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no m ore effective than the
standard over-the-counter re­
medies. such as BUstex. Because
L-lyslne to a natural component.
It to not harmful for normal
adults and children.

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Dm . 91, IM S
In the year ahead you could be
luckier than usual with people
who share your interests, poli­
tics and philosophy. Keep on the
very best of terms with those
who fulfill these requirements.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 2 2 -Ja n.
19) If you fall to finalize some­
thing today that you could have
finished, chances are It to going
to be left undone for quite some
time. Keep this In mind when
you confront the matter. Tryin g
to patch up a broken romance?
Th e Astro-Graph Matchmaker
can help you to understand what
to do to make the relationship
w ork. Mall 92 plus a long,
aelf-addressed, stamped
envelope to Matchmaker. P.O.
Box 9 1 42 8. Cl evel and. O H
44101-3428.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Subdue Inclinations today to
prejudge events and people In a
negative manner. If you persist
In thinking dark thoughts, you
could make this a very gloomy
day indeed.
I (Peb. 20-March 20) Be
■

vent fever blisters, and I want to
make sure there’s n othi ng
harmful In it before I try It.
D EAR READER: L-lyslne to an
amino acid essential for normal
g ro w th and development.
Because It to so prevalent In
many foods, deficiencies don’t
occur.
Th e use of the substance for
f e v e r b l i s t e r s Is l a r g e l y
anecdotal, meaning that Its rep­
utation exceeds Its abilities: It’s

*

very selective regarding your
playm ates today If you are
planning some type of fun activi­
ty. Be sure that all Involved are
compatible with one another.
A R U M (March 21-Aprll 19) Be
doubly tactful today In any
Involvem ents you m ay have
with people who are In positions
of authority. Th e y w ill have the
upper hand.not you.
T A U R U S (A pril 20-May 20) It
could be unwise at thto time to
prematurely discuss your plans
with others. Walt until you’re In
a definite “ go” position before
you talk about your intentions.
O B IO N I (M ay 21 -Ju ne - 2 0 )
Thto to not the right day to poke
your nose Into situations that are
none of your business. There 1s a
chance that your curiosity could
draw you Into another's com­
plicated affair.
C A N C B R (June 21-July 22) Be
open to the views and sugges­
tions of associates today, but. by
the same token, don’t think
everything they have to say to
the wisest. Use your own Judg­
ment as well.
L B O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Guard
against tendencies today to criti­

cize the efforts of others who are
w orking on something about
w h i c h you have o n ly slim
knowledge. Th e y could be right.'
r o d r(Aug. 23-Sept.
- - 22)
Th in k twice before becoming
Involved In an enterprise or
project today that to managed by
another, because you could be
held personally accountable ir
things go awry.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Th is
to not a good day to bring up an
Issue that you and your mate
don't agree on. Instead of re­
solving the matter. It could make
U m uch worse.
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Attitude to very Important today
where your productivity to con­
cerned. If you look upon things
as difficult and distasteful. U w ill
severely cram p your Industrie
(mines*.
*
9 A O IT T A R IU 9 (Nov. 23-Dec.;
21) Spending lota of m oney
today to no assurance that you'll
be guaranteed a good time. In
fact, expensive activities might
turn out to be the least fun of aS.
(01 992 . NEWSPAPER EN ­
TER P R IS E ASSN.

•

.' "*•*119*» •‘ .

Laurence Peter once suggested
that “ Bureaucracy defends the
status quo long past the time
w hen the quo has lost Its
status." Th is occurs In bridge
o cc as io n al l y. So met imes a
player clings to a card that will
never win a trick. Instead dtoc a rd in g a vital card.
Alternatively. a player signals
with a card that costa a trick in
that suit. A third possibility
occurs In today’s deal. It Is one of
the problems in the final chapter
of Hugh Kelsey's instructive
book " S i m p l e Sq u e e z e s ’ *
(914.95. G o lla n cz. 8 0 0 -2 7 4 ­
2221).
Look at the West cards only.
W hich one w ould you lead
against seven no-trump?
When partner doesn’t double
the Blackwood response of five
diamonds, asking for a lead of
that suit, there Is no reason to
attack with anything other than

a dub.
South wins the first trick with
the club ace. unblocks the A -Q of
s p a d e s , p l a y s a h e a r t to
dum m y's king and cashes the
spade'king, discarding a heart.
Now comes an avalanche of
diamonds. At the end. South
holds the club three and heart
10. D um m y has - the A -8 of
hearts. East has to keep two
hearts to hold that suit. W hich
cards do you have left? Probably
a spade and the club two. But If
so. South cashes the club three,
which to now high.
Have you seen the answer?
You must lead the club two at
trick one. not the club four. Only
then to the grand slam defeated.
I feel sure thto lead problem
would defeat everyone except
those players who lead low from
a doubleton. a style popular In
Poland.
(01992. NEWSPAPER EN ­
TER P R ISE ASSN.

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�</text>
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                    <text>S e r v i n g S a n f o r d , L a k o M a r y a n d S o m ln o lo C o u n t y o ln o o 1S 08

DIGEST

State w ants M cD o ugall
to serve 5 m ore years

□ Sports
Tribe ends slide
KISSIMMEE - The Seminole High School
boys’ soccer team collected its first win In
almost two years Monday.
B ee P a ge IB .

□People
From Midway to law school
Who would have ever thought when he was
growing up In Midway that Anthony Hall would
become a lawyer? The aspiring law student Is
within' a year of his goal, which has not been
easy.

1

Man held after eagle shooting

SANFORD — A draft opinion from
the state attorney general's office
says a child-abuse killer should
serve at least five more years In
prison, rather than be released early
on New Year's Eve. The ruling may
become official as early as today.
Ron Sachs, the governor’s com­
munications director, said this
morning. "I don’t know when the
Attorney General will actually sign
the opinion, but I expect It some-

time today or tomorrow."
Local officials are pleased with the
proposed change, and hope It Is
approved.
Sanford Police Chief Steve Har­
riett said this morning. "Anybody
with reason should realize a man
like Donald McDougall should not
be released early. Anyone who
participates In the commission of
crimes, especially against children
and the elderly, should never be
released early.”
Harriett added. "In my personal
opinion. I don't believe his original

McDougall

Assald

sentence of 34 years was enough In
the first place. People like him
should be removed from society.”
Sen. Gary Siegel. R-Altamontc
Springs, a critic of the prison release
system, hailed the opinion. He had

Joined Corrections Secretary Harry
Singletary and State Attorney
Norman Wolflnger of Seminole and
Brevard counties In requesting the
change.
"The people demanded Justice
and they were heard loud and
clear.” said Siegel, "I'm very
pleased.”
McDougall was convicted In 1983
of aggravated child abuse and
second-degree m urder In the
torture-stabbing of 5-year-old Ursula
Sunshine Assald.
According to the opinion that has
now been written by Assistant
Deputy Attorney General Lea Oarringer. McDougall. 37. Isn't eligible
for so-called “ provisional credits”
used by prison officials to reduce
□ B e e K ills r . P age BA

Seasonal sights

ST. AUGUSTINE - St. Johns County depu­
ties arrested a man after he admitted shooting
an American bald eagle on Christmas Day
because he thought the bird was a buzzard,
officials said.
Michael Bernard Hudson. 32. hus been
charged with attempting to take a threatened
species and attempting to take a non-mlgratory
game bird, said Doug Tyus. an officer with the
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Com­
mission.
Hudson also was being held on u warrant from
Winchester. Va.. charging him with violating
probation. Hudson had been convicted of auto
theft in Virginia and was not allowed to leave
the state, said St. Johns County sheriff's
spokesman Kevin Kclshaw.
American bald eagles, the national symbol,
arc protected by law as a threatened species.
Anyone convicted of harming one of the birds
can face up to 60 days In Jail and a $500 fine.
A motorist discovered the wounded 10-pound
eagle Christmas morning. Cindy Mosllng.
director and founder of Bird Emergency Aid and
Karc Sanctuary, took the bird to her mother's
house In Jacksonville.

KgggS*

*1

Its left wing was severely damaged by a shot

from a 30.06-eallbcr rifle and hatf to be
amputated.
.

Dog stuck In drysr vent
TUALATIN. Ore. — Buster the beagle got Into
trouble by doing what he does best — following
his nose.
Firefighters had to rescue him after he got his
head stuck In a clothes dryer vent leading out of
a house.
The family that owns the house In this
Portland suburb was away on vacation. Two
boys who were feeding and exercising the dog
noticed the problem Monday when they went to
check on Buster. They found him with his head
protruding through the vent.
The boys. 10 and 15, called their father, who
came over and held Buster's back end — so he
wouldn't twist his neck trying to climb out —
while firefighters rushed to the scene.
Hot water and lotion failed lo free the dog.
Finally, firefighters took a power saw to the
house, cutting a square hole around the head.

False Identification corrected

Bsmlss
CrtMWWd,,,,,,,
Osar Ahhy........
DaathS■iiiim m ii
Or. Qett............
BdHerlal.......
Florida.........
Morning
*« •
•clouds
1■j_ |
Partly cloudy with a
high in the mid 70s.
W in d n o r t h e a s t
|0-15mph.

1

B .Mmi

■ -*-■ B i

A woman arrested by Sanford police last
Thursday, gave officers a false name. Sanford
Police Lt. Mike Rotondo said this morning the
woman arrested has been Identified as Lisa
Montgomery. 19. of Sanford.
" A t the time o f the arrest.” he said.
"Montgomery had told officers her name was
Sabrina Hampton."
The police report said the woman was
apprehended when she attempted to leave a
store on Orlando Drive, with $83.99 In clothing
and beauty supplies hidden In her purse.
Police Chief Steve Harriett said an additional
charge related to the false Identity may be made
against Montgomery.

Partly
Cloudy

C h ristm as m a y b e o v e r b u t th ere a re s till som e season al sig h ts In S an ford .
S om e o f th e C h ristm as ligh ts, w h ich p ro vid ed a m a gn ificen t h o lid a y scen e a t
th e c ity m arin a, h ave n o t y e t b een taken d ow n . H o w ever, som e p eop le are
g e ttin g b ack to th e ir p re-h o lid a y rou tin e. D ou g C h erry is an e a rly m o rn in g
fish erm an In L a k e M onroe e v e n th ou gh th e w a te r m a y b e ch o p p y an d th e
w ea th er Is a b it c h illy .

Sheriff says
reorganizing
aids morale
SANFORD - SherifT Don Esilnger says his
departmental reorganization will help Improve
efTeciency and morale by involving all employees
with policy decisions.
"When you want tq build a team, you’re going
to have lo have high morale and people working
together as a team. Management will be expected
lo find areas to improve service and effcclency.
il employees 4to
n Jdo
m ik it i na m a ll **
Hut II want nall
that as well."
M onday. E s iln g er announced a m ajor
reorganization of sheriffs office departments and
stofT under a four-department structure. Esilnger
will also creutc several quality committees
comprised of staffers lo recommend further
changes In policy and procedure to the organiza­
tion. The changes will take effect Jan. 5.
Esilnger said the reorganization plan was
developed through concepts and Ideas he en­
countered during executive training at the FBI
Academy In Virginia earlier this year. Esilnger
said he also received advice from Troy Todd.

Agreement for
mall stalled

former CEO of United Telephone Co. OfFloridu.
Esilnger said Sanford Police Chief Steve
Harriett assisted In the reorganization. Hurrictt
will leave Sanford after more than seven years as
chief lo become undersheriff, second lo Esilnger.
Harriett will serve as director of the Department
of Administrative Services.

SANFORD — The beginning of a tri-party
redevelopment agreement for the Seminole
Townc Center Mall was postponed last night. The
City Commission wunts more information before
bringing ihc mutter up for consideration.
James Wlllurd. attorney for the Melvin Simon
orgunlzution. developers of Ihc mall, had sub­
mitted a new druft of the redevelopment
agreement. It contained several changes from the
original agreement. The changes deal with such
mutters us construction, uccess roadways, financ­
ing responsibilities, and other requirements.
"A s we've ulready established." said City
Munager Hill Simmons. "Ihc City Commission
would net us the Community Redevelopment
Agency. Euch of the groups, the developer. City
Commission and Redevelopment Agency, would
Ituve to agree to all |&gt;olnls of Ihc proposal.”
S|K&gt;kcspcrM&gt;ns for Simon and Associates had
previously stated lliut formal arrangements for
the flouncing of the multi-million dollar project
would not be finalized until the redevelopment
agreement Isupproved.
Simmons continued. "The commission cannot

C l M S h e riff, P age BA

' S ee M all, P age BA

Sheriff Don E$llng$r

Sanford to overhaul false alarm fees
SANFORD — Business and home
owners with faulty alarm systems
may get a break from city fees
currently charged for multiple false
alarms to police and'firefighters.
Police Chief Steve Harriett has
suggested changes be made.
Chuck Baragona, Jr., president of
Commercial Chemical Products.
Inc.. 2600 W. Airport Blvd. ap­
peared before the city commission
workshop meeting last night. He

CThere might be
times when a resident
or business can't get
service people out to
handle a problem for
two or three daysJ
-Sill S!mmon$
explained how problems with a
malfunction In his system has
caused the city to Impose several

hundred dollars In fees against his
company.
He suggested the false alarm fees
did not take Into account repair
time and other problems.
Commissioner Whitey Eckstein
agreed. He explained how Seminole
High School has already been
charged over $600 in the false
alarm fees since the ordinance went
Into effect earlier this year.
The original ordinance allowed for
three false alarm responses with no
charge during a six month period.
The fourth however, would cost

SUBSCRIBE T O T H E S AN FO R D HERALD FOR T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C

$35. with $50 for the fifth call, and
$150 for the sixth call during that
period.
When the city first started consid­
eration of the false alarm fees. City
M a n a g e r B ill S im m o n s had
explained that responses by the
police department cost an average
of $59.58 per call, while responses
by th e fire d ep a rtm en t cost
$662.40. Simmons had hoped the
fees for the false alarms would not
only help recoup some of the wasted

�I'A

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Sanford Hsrafd. Sanford. Florida - Tuesday,

29, 1982 - «A

•

" ■ * . _____

LAKELAND - An HIV-infected prostitute
said she knows she puts customers at risk o f
was stopped on tnteratate 4, near 8.R . 4S4, lor speeding. He
was charged w ith drivin g w ith a suspended license, and
unlawful speeding, According to a police report, T altt refused
to sign a statem ent allow ing U a vehicle to be towed, and It was
left along the highw ay when he was arrested. A fter he eras
released from the John E. Polk Correctional Facility. Sheriff's
deputies said he telephoned to ted them hta car was missing.
T altt did report that $1,960 In mualoal Instruments including
tw o keyboards and a drum m achine, w e n stolen w ith his car.
It has since been learned T a ltt w as wanted on a Hillsborough
a charge o f petti theft.
T altt since hla release.

Cart racing
Sanford

arrested Ph illip C. BtolU, 39, o f Deltona
said he was driving one o f tw o cars which
to be racing. He was stopped at 4th Street and Bay
A v e „ and charged wtth drivin g under the Influence o f akohol,
careless driving, and violation ortho open container law.

s s ia f tw a s * * * -

"Y o u don’t care,'*. Donna Redmond, 31,
It’s hell. It w ill destroy
ng for It. You’ll lie and
g e ta h lt.
hat first hit and get
an yth in g,", she said,
th anybody and steal
lad, I’ve sold m y body
■ paused on the deadly
em orsc." she said. " I
led a deadly disease
i do again, I wouldn’t
x k cocaine w ill m ake
ftotn Jail during the

You?ll lay down with

■ay that I gave It to them because th ey do It
with everybody.*’
’

my

Redmond believes she contracted the
virus that causes AID S three o r fou r years
ago w hile working the streets o f Inwdod,
Aubum dale and Haines City.

T U U II
la y
UOWH
W illi
a n y b o d y a n d 8 t6 8 l ffO m y O U r
D O O y ‘ O f J 5 TO Q 0 t 8 n i t . ■

sum m er after eading with a Judge to lei
her go home to re with her parents.
But Redm ond didn ’t stay long. She
returned to the atreeta and never followed
through on the Social Security disability or
food stamps her parents helped her to get.
She was arrested again In Septem ber and
December as sheriff's deputies stepped up
prostitution enforcement.
She is being held on a $6,000 bond. Judge
Ronald H en ln g has ordered that Redmond
have no chance o f release under any
pre-trial program or overcrow ding order.
"T h ere’s men out there that V ve been
with that I’m too scared or too ashamed to
tell them about It." she said. "B u t I can’t

r

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She has told men who picked her up that
she has AIDS, and som e have throw n her
out o f their car. W ith others, she has tried to
Just offer sex, take the cash, and then get
out o f the car.
" I see new girls out there and 1 talk to
th em ." she said. "1 say, ’ Look at me,
barefoot, w alking around hungry and tired,
standing on the street com er for hours.*
"1 tell them. ’You’re goin g to be like m e If
you don’t get o ff the streets.’ " she said.
"T h e y all know I have AIDS. But yet. they
still do It because o f rock cocaine. T h ey
don’ t care. Th ere’s no reaching us when

■w ’ m

m , M"

Christmas woman arvastsd
Crystal A . M iller. 31, o f Cupid A v e „ In Christmas, w as turned
in at the John E. Folk Correctional Facility by Snow Bell Bonds

THE RIGHT PRICE STORE

tin Ihnvii f’.ivnwnt
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Kill in Mm

Sanford police arrested Rhonda Fryer, 33, 1109 W . 10th
Street, Sanford, at 1733 W . A irport Btvd. on Thursday. O fficers
■aid she attem pted to rem ove tw o Rama from a store without
paying for them . T h e item s Included a bottle o f r t f poo
valu ed at 93.17, and a hair relaxer kit valued at 91.34. She w ee
charged with petit theft.

1

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R.
.
......

10th Sheet, on Sunday. Police had responded to a call
itia it U o i a diftturbftncc. Butler waft found to be wanted on a
warrant charging him wtth violation o f parole, on a burglary

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Citrus growers’ loss is our gain
V i miHmiHHltHMIlHtlHU'

tha
4

,1

ED ITO RIALS

Fe u d s, hassles
in Lo n g w ood
The city or Longwdod has carried the
nickname of "Wrongwood" for tome time and
the current city commlaatonera are doing
iprove the reputation
reputatl
little to Improve
o f the town for
feuds and haaales.
The latest Incident concerns a public verbal
exchange between Commissioner Steve Miller
• aided by Mayor Paul Lovestrend • and City
Administrator Jim McFellin -over the pro­
blems of flooding in a section of the dty.
McFeUo charged that the manner and
method of bringing up the issue was done In a
way intended to embarrass him. McFellin la
correct. Miller's actions during the comram on m w uni were not intcnocQ to mmvc

Am ericans often are confounded by what the
governm ent does In their name. But nothing
beftiddlea m ore than W ashington paying firm e r*
subsidies to withhold a certain portion o f their
crops from m arket so that consumers pay higher
piiccw tor food*
California's citrus industry provides a too ripe
exam ple o f this absurd policy. Nearly 40 percent
o f the state's annual orange crop never makes It
to supermarket produce stands. Tw o billion
perfectly good navel oranges are either left to ro f
on trees, fed to livestock, dumped on foreign
m arkets o r juiced,
In a farew ell gift to consumers before leaving
office, Agriculture Secretary Edward Madlgan
announced this week, that hto departm ent no
longer w ill lim it id les o f oranges and lem ons
grow n In California and Arlsona. In a fell swoop,
Madlgan put the (fritters to a federal agriculture
policy that has been In place for m ore than a
half-century.
Federal "m arketing ord ers" for dtru s and
other farm products were Introduced In 1037 to
help grow ers m ake II through the Depression. It
was supposed to be a tem porary program but. as
lawmakers then failed to realise, once a federal
entitlem ent Is created, tt la all but Impossible to
d oaw sy w tth lt.

T h e citrus Industry did not surrender its
accustom ed entitlem ent to artificially high prices
for oranges and lem ons without a fight. Sunklst
Q ro w e rs In c ., t h e --------------------------S h erm an Oaks,

Calif., farmers coope r a tlv e (w h ich
operates much like a
cartel), suggested &gt;H
was very near unAm erican o f Madlgan
to repeal a hallowed
policy that ensured
the nation's orangea n d le m o n -e a ttn g
populations a steady
su p ply o f th eir
chosen fruit at stable
prices.
Sunklst also direly
of tha cartal la
warned that 4.000
tha utmost
n a v e l-o ra n g e pro*
Important
ducers In California
thing to tha
and Arlsona w ill lose
Sunklst citrus
up to $5 m illion a
barons. ■
w e e k a n d 3 .0 0 0
lem on producers up
to &gt; ! m illion a week. Thousands o f job losses are

' • t o * only loners In all o f this w ill be the dtru s
barons at Sunklst who suddenly find them selves
an unnecessary anachronism.

Econom ic sum m it
was educational
One o f the most Interesting things I've
w a tc h ed on T V fo r a w h ile w a s - t h e
president-elect's two-day economic summit.
Since m y em ployer expects at least a good
show o f an honest day’s work. I couldn't keep
m y eyes glued to It, but I did keep CNN on In
the background and sneaked a listen when I
could.
There was a tim e I'd have thought even 10
m inutes o f an econom ic summit was a real
n a p f e s t . a n d ao
would a huge per^
ccnlage or my fellow

mlnistrators in a m n , years., go Miller’s
actions are nothing new. Milt ouch a turnover
la. to put It diplomatically, not the beat way to
run a city.
Miller even asked the commission to
"admoctiah" the city administrator but hla
allegations against McFellin were simply
wrong. Millers basic contention wag that
McFellin had dismissed or Ignored dtiaenp*
complaints about flooding.
problem had to be resolved through both the
efforts o f the city and Seminole County.
McFdttn stated he would work with the
residents to do all he could to allevtalfr the

foreseen, as w ell a* seasonal layoff*.
I don 't think so.
Sunktet to no m ote concerned about the fete o f
the W est's 6.000 orange and lemon grow er*
than. asy. OPEC (a strikingly sim ilar "coopers.
U ve") was about the fortunes o f Individual oil
exporting countries. Preservation o f the cartel Is
the utmost Important thing to the Sunklst d tru s
barons.
Until Madlgan upset the apple cart. Sunklst
had a neat arrangement that very w ell would
have made the OPEC sheiks envious. Under
fed eral law. C aliforn ia and A rlto n a citrus
grower* were perm itted to operate a com m ittee on which Sunklst has a decided m ajority o f votes
- to determ ine how much o f each year's harvest
tli
tO ITtflLlUCl*
T h e com m ittee determined the market share o f
various d tru s packers. The packers. In turn,
determ ined how much product they received
from Individual g rowers. T h e beauty o f the whole
arrangem ent Is that any packer or grow er that
bucked the system and challenged the citrus
cartel, risked federal civil and crim inal prosecu-

citizens.

We

think economies was

something we should
be interested in. The
result was that we

■

A n y o n e w h o Is

'every poor reputation. The

Than there are things as sim ple as glass.
sfiijin— o f songbirds die annually by thwack­
in g In to m odern w in d ow ed tow ers and.
hackporefa slidin g'glass doors. Even our pets
take a toll. No one la sure about the numbers,
but when dam eetk a le d cats are outdoor* they
are thought to accoun t for the loss o f severs!

putting the pubbe good first and everything

B reym eyer* Fourth
TbomaaboroG

to
of
es

2

and Uve.
O ver the decades
not only have vast
exp an ses o f tra d i­
tion al son gb ird
h a b ita t b een c o n ­
verted to urban and
agricultural tiae, b u t ----------------------------- 1
to doing so the rem aining habttxl has .been
hfwfcw f U|I
^
f M l h y tdto
T id e frapsen tatfon baa triggered a particu-

££

s s es

l I
,-a l

iy the game
drove the car Into the
lagoon — right after t Thaavaraga
economic
they Jumped out.
knowledge of
O r as S tu a rt
American
Altm ann o f Braudels
citizens la a
University put II ao
national
w e ll d u r in g the
disgrace.J
summit, w e let ihem
tu m ou r econom y
Into "a gigantic Ponxl schem e."
T h e average economic knowledge o f Am er­
ican cltlsens la a national disgrace — it's
econom ic Illiteracy, realty. When we discov­
ered a goodly portion o f us couldn't read a
sheet o f safety directions or fill out a Job
application, w e established program s all over
the country to teach reading. Yet we can 't
understand the rules o f com pounding Interest
nor. the beat stay to Invest our m oney for
long-term security, and It keeps us struggling
to m ake ends meet durtng our working years
and poor du rin g retirem en t. S ociety is
drained lath er than enhanced. This Isn't a
c r iiii?
And Why are people In the richest nation on
E arth eo stupid about econom ics? For
starters, we hall from*people who believed
m oney Was the root o f all evil. T h ey thought
U was som ething nice people, just aren 't
interested lit. end didn't consider u a tool
with which to do dobd and a necessary
medium o f exchange. Literature and m ovies
bed over poverty
not by actually
to eat or decent
getting
clothes to
Education followed suit. English, math,
science and physical education were required
subjects throughout moat public education,
and econom ics. If offered at all. was filled
with theory and no practical application. W e
foam ed nothing about anything w e'd use In
our live*: budgeting, how charge-account
interest' is figured, investing m oney for
highest yield, m anaging s business.
. A fter tw o years o f high-school algebra.

ung people in the 1960s and
m aturity In a culture that was
mcanlna In antrltual values,
lain eVU. and going back to

saltan ra coitty form ed "to stork In a coopera­
tive way to prom ote songbird conservation,"
says the WttdUfe foundation' s Stengel, who to
involved III the effort. Govern m o t lie n c ie t
from the concerned nations, environm en­
talists, forest products organisations and
people Interested In birds are part o f the

have k i rather, fulfill your needs without
m oney ao you dmiri w e d U lo begin with. By
the tints cultural oam m oo sense returned and
w e began lo understand m oney as a tool we
should foam to use wisely, u was difficult to
Ond tim e to re-educate ourselves. W e had
famUle*. careers Into which we were putting
extra hours, second Jobs.

�Sanford HaraM. Sanford. Florida - Tuaaddy, Oaoambar » , 1992 - aa

Alarm

Killer
lie
Ing. H does lend legal weight to
sentences o f any decision to keep McDougall
aom r o ffe n d e r s fo case
overcrowding.
'"M cD o u g a ll cou ld s till
McDougall had collcclcd 1,830
days o f such credits.
(n Nayem ber 1983. he waa
“ Inasmuch aa McDougall waa sentenced to 34 yearn for the
con victed o f m u rder In the
girl's slaying. Eyen with five
second degree, he would appear m ore years. M cD ougall will
to be precluded from recelvli
likely be released 18 years early
provisional credits." the dral
because o f other state laws that
opinion stales.
allow jcrtdlt t im e to reduce
McDougall. who lived w ith jh e prison pveicrow ^lng.
girl and her m other In Seminole
. E lev en y e a r s and three
County, forced the child to eat
m onths w ere lopped o ff his
soap, deprived her o f food and
water for days and forced her to original sentence because o f a
givin g him 10 days'
stand.naked for hours and recite state law
Au*
gHMSi A'to 8aa
l he alphabet; according to test!* crrtm tor every nvuviin nc k t y c i .
Mower l i t providing erra m
monyat his trial.
for work In prison Industries cut
The opinion also says that
live years and nine months from
McDougall would be Ineligible
his sentence.
for the credits If he com m itted a
sex act or aggravated battery aa
The girl's mother. Susan Bar*
part o f his crimes.
retl Assatd. served five years o f a
"It's wonderful that this man
13-year sentence.
w ill not be allowed to be on the
And Flack said Butterworth's
streets," Kerry Flack, assistant
alao could aflbet the
to Corrections Secretary Harry
s I other Inmates achedSingletary, said Monday. “ W e're
Very glad that the attorney next six months.
general was able to find a legal
means for us to keep h im ."
“ This esse ki only em blem atic
According to the opinion, the o f w h a l'a w r o n g w i t h t he
f i n a l d e t e r m i n a t i o n o n system ." said form er state Hep.
McDougall's case rests with Cor* D ick B a tch elor, an O rlan oo
r e e t t o n s S e c r e t a r y H a r r y children's advocate. "T h e onus
S in gletary. A ttorn ey G eneral
Bob Butterworth must sign the change the law so
opinion to make It official, but any future
Oarrtnger said he did not expect
that lo b e a problem.
‘ W hile the opinion

a

A ...

E LLE R C I HDB H CW
Ellen C. Anderson, 68. Lake o f
the W oods Boulevard. Fern Bark,
died Sunday. Dec. 37. at her
residence. Bom Dec. I. 1996. In
Torrtngton. Conn., she moved to
Central Florida In 1987. She waa
a retired teacher and Catholic.
Survivors Include daughters.
Maureen Harvey. Maitland. Lynn
M arie. Lansdale. Pa.. E laine
Manning. Fem Park; brother.
Jack Casey. Masaachueettardwo
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n eral
Home. Altam onte Springs In
charge o f arrangements.
WtUlam Gerard Bourne. 59. o f
Spring Lake HUM Drive. Alta*.

Central Florida in fV ft t She waa
branch m anager for Florida U ft
Systems Inc. and a member o f
St. M ary M agdalen C atholic
Church. Mr. Bourne w q i an
Arm y veteran o f the Korean
War.
Survivors Include wife, Betty;
daughters. Mary Beth Naaaar.
Susan, both o f Orlando: Uaa
B ro w er. D e lto n a , C h ris tin e
Gorman. W inter Park; brothers.
John. Boynton Beach. Richard.
Naples: sister. Jane Flynn. O r
lando; one grandchild.
! B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n eral
Home, Altam onte Springs." In
charge o f arrangements.
Mary O lad yi Brohun, 93. Of
339 8t. Jam es Place, Longwood,
died S atu rd ay, D ec. 39, at
iLakevtew Nursing Home, San­
ford. Born July 19. 1900, In
G riffin . O a., sh e m oved to
Central Florida tn 1904. She was
'a retired reffiateied nurse and a
; member o f Pint-B aptist Church
;o f G riffin. Mrs. Brohun wae eieo
a m em ber o f the H istorical
Society o f South Carolina.
S iirv tv o rs In clu d e slaters.
Grace Stallworth W esL Navato,
Calif.. Louise Stallworth Har- rciaon, u roem ooro, u
#
B ritton fu n eral Horace Son*

Joseph Jam es Connelly, 43. o f
Eldorado D rive. DeBary, died
Dec. 34. at Central
Florida '
ford. B o n f Jan. 3. ’ 1947. In
Olean. N.Y.. be m oved to DeBary
13 years ago from there. He was
a salesman for Hom e Depot and
attended First Baptist Church o f
DeBary. Mr. Connelly waa a
veteran o f the Vietnam W ar and
a member o f the V.F.W . *8093.
DeBary.
S u rv jv o ra Include wife.
Patricia Ann: aorta. Kevin and
J o s e p h , D e B a r y : b ro th e rs .
Patr ick. Franci s, P a li) an d
Tamm. Oteaai sisters, Ekxabeth,
Maureen Negron. Olean . Ann
Angora. Rochester. N.Y.. and
Kathleen. Orlando.
Stephen R. Batdauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In charge o f
arrangements.

commercial businesses."
Mayor Bet lye Smith observed.
"It would seem logical, but It's
just os expensive for police and
firemen to answer a false alarm
call no matter where It Is, so I
don't believe we should go along
with that Idea."
" I t also takes police and
firemen away from possibly re­
sponding to another call." added
C o m m i s s i o n e r A . A . Me*
Ctanaturn.
Commissioner Eckstein sug­
gested the charges be reestab­
lished al 835 per call, beyond
(he first three false alarm re­
sponses,
“ I think we should also con­
sider the time element for hav­
ing a foully sykicm repaired."
said Simmons. '.'There might be
“ The fourth option would be A times, like over a three day
com
o f any o f these." he holiday weekend, when a resi­
_k bination
^ *k
dent or business can't get serv­
“ Between Septem ber and Oc­ ice people out to handle n
tober." B vagon a told the com- problem for two or three days"
mtaetqpers. “ we had seven false
With a concensus vote. Mayor
alarm s at Com m ercial Chemical, Smith Instructed Simmons lo
and under the present ord i­ come up with a new draft of the
nance. this w ill coot us 938S." ordinance.
He continued. “ If you go with
Simmons suggested the re­
C hief Harriett's first option. II vised ordinance could possibly
would only cost us 8335. and his be prepared In time for the next
second option would bring the regularly scheduled City Com­
foes down to 835."
mission meeting, on Jan. 11.

C e a tia a e d fro m P age I A

Financial m anager Penny
Although the reorganization Flemming will become 'director
entails 30 alafT transfers. Eal* of the new Department or Man­
Inger said the plan will result In agement and Financial Services,
about a $40,000 annual savings which will have fiscal and man­
after several eliminated positions agement oversight duties over
are vacated through normal at­ all other departments. Esllnger
trition.
'sold th e . department will he
Only one person will receive a pattern ed s im ila r ly tn the
promotion as a result or the county's Office of Management
changes, said Esllnger. Lt. Greg and Budget, which Flemming
Barnett, now In charge of the headed.
C ity C ou n ty 'In v e s tig a tiv e
The Department o f Enforce­
.Bureau, will be promoted to the ment will become the Depart­
tuition or inspector In the ment of Law Enforcement, and
ivlslon of Professional Stan­ enforcement commander MaJ.
dards. Lt., Paul Jaynes, now In Roy Hughey will be the director
charge o f the Crim inal in ­ of law enforcement. Esllnger
vestigations Division, will take sold alt sworn directors will
over supervision of CCIB.
continue lo hold the rank of
Tw o people will be hired, major, with the exception of
including Phyllis Yowcll. a. 19- Undcrshcrl ITHarriett.
year veteran of the Florida De­
MaJ. Dave Brlcrton will remain
partment of Law Enforcement.
the director of the Department or
Under Esllnger's new "cor­ Corrections, but his second In
porate" design management command. Capt. Greg Fulch.
structure. Harriett will have the will become deputy director of
title or director of the Depart­ the Operations Service Division.,
ment of Administration. The but with the same rank,
department will oversee ad­
Futch's administrative duties
ministrative services, the pro­ will be given to Capt. Jay
fessional standards dlstvtslon. Leman, who will be transferred
w h ich In c lu d e s what was from the Administrative Services
fomerly known as ‘internal Af­ Division or the SheflffVOfnce to
fairs" functions: and computer becom e deputy correction s
services.
director.

B

He added. “ I believe under our
situation, this would be a more
logical assessm ent."
“ If we are going to reexamine
1A
mons said the Information might
this ordinance." said Commix. ■
act as the be available as an additional
sloner Lon Howell. “ I would like
act
as Item for that m eeting, but he
o g c iiiy n
u its
to see false alarm s al residences agency, nor the agency
the com mission, even though expected It would be more likely
be low er than those Imposed on
they consist o f the: same people, that the Information would be
but It requires the approval o f an presented for the Jan. 11 m eet­
a g e n c y . W h e n t he a g e n c y ing, .which would be the regu­
approves tt. it would then go to larly scheduled workshop and
the same people, but acting as
the City Com m ission."
" It sounds com plicated, but
d a Evelyn Rumncy. 88. o f 66 that'a the way the legal docu­
u ia n e . n a n i a
Rockcove Court. Sanford, died m en t! must be approved." he
Monday. Dec. 38. at her resi­ explained.
dence. Boro June 39, 1906. In
During a workshop discussion,
Seararoont, Mathe. she m oved to s e v e r a l c o m m i s s i o n e r s r e ­
Central Florida In 1973. She waa quested more details regarding
the differences between the orig­
Survivors include daughter. inal agreem ent, and the one
dr Wltttam Manuel. 73. o f M arilyn Elliott. Berwick. Maine: presently being proposed.
sons., R ic h a r d . S a n fo r d .
Simmons said he would have a
Clarence. Oak Park, and W alter.' com plete listing for commission
r.'B o n t Fieb. 17. 1919r In. 8t. AuguaUne; 13 grandchildren. study and con sid era tio n by
16 great-grandchildren and four poaslbly Jan. 5. or the next
S h ctriierdstow n . W . V a „ he
m oved to Orange c ity IS years great-great-grandchildren. .
regular com m ission m eeting on
Q r a m k o w F u n e r a l H om e. Jan. 11.
ago from G fca O ary. W . Va. He
Sanford, In charge o f arrangeThe Jan. 5 m eeting, on a
o f m eats.
Center fo r the
Tuesday, would be a special
m e e t i n g c a l l e d fo r the
S u rv iv ors Include wife,
sw earing-in cerem on y o f re­
Dorothy: sons. Jeffrey 6.. Orange
elected Mayor B cltye Smith, aa .
C ity . * D . E rlk p o n . D e lto n a :
weII as com iW iasRHidrift’BtlH '7
M M
L . Cain, DeThomas and L o g H ow *U ..S4to,, x M M • &gt;
•mi &lt;111*1
&lt;lnuo 1
t
ir
slaters, EUxebeth
« 4m
m
Ruth Ham m ond o f !
ln d » He' m oved to 1
W .Vs.: brother. J . K eg jU h ey o f Central Florida tn 1938. He was
a retired com m ercial w elder and
Catholic. Mr. W athen waa a
Stephen R. BaldeulT Funeral Marine C o m sergeant and vet­
Hom e. Deltona, la charge o f eran o f the Korean War.
Survivors Include daughters.
D e b b ie . O r l a n d o . P a t r i c i a
Fltagerald. Lake M ary; eons.
CMra 8. Nelson. 84. o f Outer Jess, Mark, both o f Longwood:
C ir c le D riv e . O v ie d o , d ie d
staters, Dorothy Qrtmwood. Cas­
ir, Dec. 34. a l W inter s e lb e r ry . M erlo n M ag no ll e.
Parnt Memorial Hosottal. Boro
Bo
C h a teh o o ch lc : six g r a n d ­
children.
June B. 1908 In Brooklyn. N.Y.,
N .l
she m o v ed to Central
I , . . Florida
.
Deacon Crem ation Service o f
1979. giro waa a ragtotorad m in e C en tral F lorid a. O rlando. In
charge o f arrangements.

Mall

meeting night.
Mayor Smith and Simmons
both explained the postpone­
ment during last night’s regular
meeting. No representatives of
the mall or the attorney made
any presents) Ions.

■“ tatss

.... i

mHardware
Stores

E .. L a k e W e ir. P au l L e w ie
Nelson. C incinnati: daughter.
N a n cy N elso n , M ora l.
AM Faiths
Gaaaribariry. In charge o f ar-

Prsybyas. 77. o f
Sunday, Dag. 37. a t Central
fold , Dam A M . 30. 1815, In
N.Y.. be m oved to Da-

ArswL*?
m aa for

a ttd w
B ritos ■, Mr. PrsybvM waa an
Arm y veteran o f W orld W ar U
o f D.A.V.. Orange
C ity and V .P.W . Pool *4 83 .
nf.tLY,

• Christmas Loft Overs

and form er ch ief o f stall at Bon
ua Hospital. Oroeee Pointe.
. and 8t. John's Hospital.
D etroit. He w as a q adjunct
' neor and lecturer at W ayne
i Medical University.
8 u rvfvo ra Include wife,
Christine: sons. Donald. Long­
w ood. John Jacob. Tren ton .
Mich.: daughter. Barbara Ann
Bhitoon. Orange C ity: brother.
J o h n . D e tr o it: f i v e "g ra n d Crem ation Service o f
C en tra) Florida, O rlando. in,

N.Y.1
Va-.
Va.:
ala ter. C la ra O arm an .
rhorkliw raga N.Y.. aad seven
Stephen It. BaldaidT Funeral
Hom e. Deltona, la charge o f

D ovle W ilson

• Broken Paokagea
• One of a Kind
• Dlaconttnuad llama

Dr. Jacob Ferdinand W enxel.
83, o f 131 M argo Lane. Longwood, died Friday. Dec. 33. at
Florida, L ivin g Nursing Center.
Longwood. Bom Nov. 30. 1909.
In Detroit, he m oved to Central
Florida In 1071. He waa a cancer
surgeon and Pentecostal. Dr.
W cnsei waa a m em ber o f the

Fuser* mntm tar’tor. Wtoaa vNl to
,Ok . m a t e p.m
, lasw Orman
. c«H a&gt; tto Iwreral
trtm • S « until tarvfca

SAVE 50%
SAVE 70%
AvpaMMHn Med
FIHUp NowFor Your
Nowroan Cookout
20lb. BotUot Only...

Pay

it ill Stores
Reg. *8“
JW M V IM L S IN M 1-4-63
C O U P O N

C O U P O N

83.

Orients Avenue, Altamonte
Bprinrik dfod Sunday. Oat. 37.
CUNk S
_ _ ____M&gt;*
_ ______________ M tourat U a Cara Orator. AMaaroato
to*'
afofesw
•‘cam
am
mamas
IT
m
TOm I
Springe. Bara March 30. 1808. e jlm wwa CwmUnr «MS *aaar la
dr
to
Tenet., riw awvad
kt Mmphts.
Memphis. Tam.,
Sy Oramkaw Famral

to Centra! Florida thia pear. She
waa a secretary for a title
Michael P. Oluhan. 48. 880
Jasm ine Drive. C aseribrn y. died
Sunday. Dec. 37. at M s resi­
dence. Bom Dec. 38. 1848. to
New York C ity, he proved lo
Central Florida from Long M end
in 1977. He was a carpenter and
a m ember o f the Fam ily Worship
Center In Sanford.
1 S u rvivo rs in clu d e m other,

Sheriff-

1A
expenses, but persuade alarm
owners to maintain the equip­
ment in a better faahion.
Last night. Harriett called for a
reexamination o f the ordinance,
"T h e way I see It," he said, “ we
have three or fou r options.
Number one. we could count any
repeated false alarm s during a
94 hour period aa only on e."
"S e c o n d ly ." he continued,
“ we could continue to charge
835 after the first three alarms,
and charge an additional 835 for
each additional alarm beyond
Ih a l."
“ W e could alao give credit and
not count false alarm s If It Is a
bonaflde alarm malfunction that
la being worked cm," Harriett

Survivors include brother,
te n .
C am ped . b oth o f M em phis.
Tenn.
AM Faiths Cremation Service.
Caaarlhrrry. In charge o f ar-

aromav.autavatvn

I Is Mnsics at Cantral rUrUa MW
Itleto Caslar Parkway, Suit* joo,

&lt;totoato.rt.mi:.

ton m m i H sy Oramkaw Punaral

1.00

�T

Campaign encounters
of chosen few lead
to special Invitations

C ollectibles
M ore
^
Houn hoM H a w
Colactbtaa •Rugs
Fumftjra •Tabtaa

ByMATTVANCIV

■ ■

Associated Press Writer

.^

WASHINGTON - More than 60 "fares or hopepresident-elect Clinton credits with inspiring his
campaign of Inclusion will be his personal guests
during Inauguration week.
* The invitations were extended to people
ranging from a 10-year-old boy in Phoenix who
dramatized in a letter to the president his family's
economic plight to an HlV-Infcctcd marathon
runner who tries to break down stereotypes of
people with AIDS.

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE

What they all have In common arc chance
encounters wllh cither Clinton or Vice Presi­
dent-elect Oore — or their wives. Hillary and
Tipper — during the campaign that either
touched one o flh e four emotionally or capsulizcd
the message they wanted to deliver.
"Both families feel strongly about having the
Opportunity to honor them during inauguration
week." said Rahm Emanuel, the Inaugural
committee's co-executive director.
; The Invitees Include 10-year-old Ryan Sollacc
o f Phoenix, who wrote Clinton in October alter his
father had told him that, because of the family's
economic situation, he couldn't play Little
League baseball.
1 "I work nights. Cynthia works days, times are
tough financially, and 1 had to tell him. 'no. you
can’t do that.’ ” Ryan's father. Michael, said
Monday. "It's always been no. because we always
Have to work."
( Clinton credited Ryan's letter with making a
point "that I’ve been trying to make all over the
Country." only much “ more powerfully than I
could."
‘ Ryan says he's going to the inauguration with
his mother, who works for a freight company.
ilyan's father aald he would "love to go" but
fon't be able io get off work. He works for a
itreet-sweeping service.
The Inaugural com m ittee is paying all costs for
he "faces o f h ope" guests — including transporat ion. lodging and providing com plem entary
tinner jackets and gowns for the Inaugural Ball.
fw o days before the Jan. 20 swearing-in. the

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Bob Loveland opened Loveland's Brfln totitng In
1B77. and moved to his current location , at 506
W est 13th Street In Sanford. In 1968. Bob says,
•Most any piece can be restored, a o d o n t throw tt
away before you have It looked a t ' Loveland's
handles all phases o f foraitu re repair and reftntohmg. from stripping, repairing, custom reflntohtng.
cane seat work, rush seat work, press cane work
and some upholstery.
Custom reflnishing is hto specialty. Bob works

Sm all jobs take less than one week, but allow
four to e t# it weeks Ibr 'm ajor reconstruction.'
Bob hae even done work for local country dubs.
such as Sweetwater and Roeemont.
There are two new features o f Loveland's bustness that Bob would Uke to tell you about. First.
Loveland's to a new member o f T h e Exchange',
t h e Exchange' to a barter-type system where
members earn paints for trade-out with other
businesses that are members o f the program. If
you would Uke more information, give Bob a call,
And second. Loveland's has acquired an antique
show space at the corner o f State Road 436 and
(Road. Bob to set up for consignment - he'll
types o f antiques and collectibles tnclud"Now that Christmas to behind us. make a New
Year's resolution to get that old ftirnlture re -done?
and remember us at Loveland's Reflnlshingl' Love­
land's Reflnishing can be reached at 322-7496.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, Decamber 29, 1992 - l »

Business Review

Casablanca

j

‘Play It again, Hratch’&gt;
Associated Press Writer

PUT YOUR BUSINESS O N TH E MOVE

The History o f Lee's Fam ous

U.S.SAVING* BONDS
THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT'

CASABLANCA. Morocco — From the looks of
the dim tier In Casablanca, you'd expect to look
up and see Humphrey Bogart serving drinks
under the gaxe of Ingrid Bergman.
Fifty years after Warner Bros, released
“ Casablanca." among the most enduring and
popular films In cinema history, the legend lived
on In this watering hole on Morocco's western
coast.
,
Much like Rick's Cafe Amertcaln o f the film:
beggars and pickpockets thrive outside thd
Casablanca Bar. In a comer of the Hyatt Hotel iri
downtown Casablanca.
But Inside It's not Sam. the black piano player,
who croons “ As Time Goes B y" but a Lebanese
named Hralch who sings In 14 languages —,
Including Japanese.
Movie posters of Bogart as hard-boiled bu|
sentimental cafe owner Rick. Bergman as hlq
cx-lover lisa and Paul Henreld as stoic but
dedicated resistance leader Victor Lasslo covet;
the walls.
The wallers and bartenders ahe dressed as
Bogart In the film's celebrated final scene. In
trench coats and fedoras, or as French police;
captain Louis Renault.
“ It's kind of fun. with all the people dressed
up." said John Shanahan, an attorney from
Roseland. N.J. "It's In character — the waiter's a
seriously unfriendly Frenchman."
Casablanca Isn't quite the den of espionage.,
Intrigue and gambling the film evokes but a dusty
port city of 3 million people, home to Morocco's
textile, car parts and construction Industries.
"There's no similarity; the movie was filmed'
entirely In a studio." says Abderrahlm Daoudt.
Casablanca’s director o f tourism. "But It had an
enormous Impact. Every day. somewhere In the
— '■* It's shown.... It a an excellent publicity

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TUESDAY

Sanford Herald

Decem ber 2 9 , 1992

Sports
LOCALLY
Magic pound Bucks
ORLANDO — Sliuqiilllc O'Neal had 2 1 |k &gt;Im I h .
14 rebounds and five blocked shots and Orlando
outrebounded Milwaukee til-30 In a 110-1)4
victory over (lie Rucks on Monday night.
Dennis Scott scored 25 points. Including live
3-polntcrs to Immisi his league-leading total to 60.
for the Manic, which has won five o f six names.

Nason helps Rollins
WINTER PARK - Derek Thurston led Rollins
with 14 points In a OH-12 rout over the
Milwaukee School of Engineering.
O nly two oth er R ollin s players beside
Thurston were In double (Inures but 13 o f the 14
players on the Tars roster scored. Former
Seminole Community Collenc standout Rriau
Nason had 12and Mike llolmesaddcd 10.

AROUND TNI ITATI
Heat melt Lakers lead
MIAMI — Harold Miner scored 12 ol his 1H
points In the fourth quarter, and the Miami Ileal
overcame an IH-polut deficit to earn their lirst
win ever over the Los A n g le s Lakers. 107-06.

FSU rolls
TALLAHASSEfe — Sam Cassell scored 31
points and No. 1H Florida Stale nave roach Pat
Kennedy Ills 250th career win with a 105) HO
victory over Maryland-Ualtimore County.
The Scmlnolcs (7-3) played without their
second-leadlnn scorer. Doun Edwards, who
dislocated a (Inner In pre-name warmups.
Rob Sura added 23 points for the Scmlnolcs.
Rodney Dobard had 17. Ryron Wells 13 and
Derrick Carroll contributed 10.

Tampa ekes out win

-

, , V . ,V ,

TAM PA — DeCarlo Drvcaux led five Tampa
players In double dlnlts with 15 points as the
Spartans topped Rose-Hulmuu 78-75.
Rose-Hulmnn (H-2) wus leadiun 72-71 when
their top scorer. Scott Reach, committed an
offensive foul and then not a technical.
Tampa's Rennie Larry hit both free throws
and Dcveaux nailed one of two technical free
throws to put Tampa (7-11ahead for nood.

Miami In tourney finals
MIAMI — Sheryl Swoopcs scored 11 strainhl
points to break a first-half tie and finished with a
game-high 24 to lead No. 11 Texas Tech to a
03-56 win Monday over Oklahoma (2-3) In the
opening name of the Miami Holiday Clusslc.
In another name. Vicki Plowdcn scored IH
points und grabbed 11 rebounds as No. 22
Miami (4-1) dropped Ruckncll (1-5)74-54.

1 r r » ' K. t

. . , ................... ...

Gators can't atop Boilers
EL PASO. Texas — Glenn Robinson made five
o f seven free throws In the final 2:21 Monday
night as No. 13 Purdue held off Florida 67-63 lii
the Sun Carnival Classic.
Unbeaten Purdue (7-0) advanced to Tuesday's
chumpionshlp game against Texus-EI Paso (7 *2).
which defeated Austin Pcay 77-56 In the other
first-round game. Florida (4-3) and Austin Pcay
(3-4) meet In the consolation game.

WNAT&gt;DNAPRiNlNO
Boys' Basketball
[ Ovlsdo at Arty's Classic, Bristol, Ttnn., TBA.

Girls’ Basketball
( Polk Holiday Classic, Lakeland High School:
Ssmlnole vs. Bonlfay-Bathlehem, 10:30 a m . (II
Seminole loses they will play again at 4 p.m. and
II they win they play at 8:30 p.m.)

Boys’ Soccer
□Central Florida Challenge: Seminole va. New
Port RIchey-Gull.TBA.

UPlxza Hut Invitational: at Bishop Moors High
School — Boone vs. Lake Howell, 11 a m.; Lake
Brantley vs. Tampa-Chamberlain, 1 p.m.; Evans
vs. Bishop Moore, 3 p.m.; Lyman vs. Tampa-Leto,
5 p.m.; at Edgawatar High School — Oviedo vs.
Dr. Phillips, noon; Lake Mary vs. Coconut Creek,
2 p.m.; Winter Park vs. Edgewater, 4 p.m.;
Daytona Beach-Seabreeze vs. Clearwater Central
Catholic, 6 p.m.

Girls’ Soccer
□ Lake Howall In Central Florida Challenge,
Kissimmee, TBA.

#*

§

FO O TB ALL
119 p.m. — WOFL 35. college. Fresno Stale vs.
USC.(L)

B

Winless streak over

Shorthanded Tribe wins on penalty kicks
From S ta ff R eports
KISSIMMEE — Who needs a full team nnyway?
The Seminole High School boys' soccer team
put an end to a two-year •winless streak Irt
dramatic fashion Monday afternoon In the
opening round o f the Central Florldn Challenge at
Silver Spurs Stadium in Kissimmee.
Despite playing without six players. Including
two starters, the Tribe was able to pull out a 6-5
victory over Stuart-Souih Fork on penalty kicks.
Regulation play ended in a 2-2 tic. but Seminole
made four of five kicks in the shootout to claim
the win.
Tony Odero. who almost didn't piny because he
missed the bus. nailed the game winner on the
final try o f the five attempts each team got.
"Four guys missed the bus.” said Seminole
coach Carlos Macrllno. “ Tony was the only one
who showed up. I asked the team If lie should
piny or should we hold him out to tench him a
lesson. They voted to let him play and he ends up
with the game winner. '
"It was a little lonely on the sidelines. I only
had two reserves on the bench."
The victory moves Seminole (1-7) Into a
matchup with old foe New F’ort Richey-Gulf In
lodny's quarterfinals. Gulf was the Tribe's
opponent the Inst two times they appeared In the
regional championships. South Fork fell to 5-6-1.
"N ew Port Richey, beat us 2-0 at there place
and 2-1 nt our place," recalled Mcrlino. "T h e
second time Geordle Davison scored with five

minutes left to give us a 1-0 lend. 1 wns pinching
myself to sec If 1 was asleep because they were
22-1 and we were 7-10. hut they came on late to
beat us."
Gulf bent Knu Gallic 4-1 Monday In advance to
thcqunrtcrflnnls.
Their (Gull) conch saw me alter the gam e."
laughed Mcrlino. "H e said he was not going to tell
them our record."
Mcrlino knew he wns In for a lough game after
the South Fork coach told him before the game.
"I don't care what your record Is. I know what
conference you play In. You're not going to fool
anybody."
South Fork took a 2-1 lead at halftime after
unassisted goals by Fnblauo Rarros and Rick
Boyce offset an unassisted score by the Trll&gt;e's
Rill Morris.
With time running short. Seminole finally
gained the 2-2 lie with 7:12 remaining on a Jim
Johnson score off an assist from Morris.
Unlike the regular season, when an extra period
Is played to try to break the tic before going to
penalty kicks, the team's went directly to PK’s.
Roth team's pick five players each and they go In
alternating order until as winner is decided.
The Tribe missed Its first attempt, but then
goalkeeper Jon Williams. Ren Hrown. Jason
Walravcn and Odera each connected on their
tries, while South Fork hit Its first two attempts,
but then missed two of its last three to give
Seminole the victory.
The win broke another winless streak for the

Tribe's head coach.
"In 18 years o f coaching this was the sixth time
I've gone to penalty kicks," said Mcrlino. "A n d
It’s the first time I’ve come out the winner."
Mcrlino said there Is a lot to think about,
strategy wise, when you go to penalty kicks.
"D o you put your best kicker first or last? Do
you kick first or do you let them kick first?," said
Mcrlino. " I like to go first because then you put
pressure on them to match you. As far as your
kicking alignment goes. I've tried it both ways.
"Sometimes I pul my best kicker last and he
never gets to try. because the match was already
over. Today 1 put my best kicker first and he was
the one who missed, you never know ."
Seminole outshot South Fork 11-8 and also
attempted seven com er kicks to two for their
opponents. The South Fork goalie, Doug Smith,
came up with five saves, while Williams deflected
three for the Tribe.
Unlike most games this season, the multi­
talented Williams was forced to stay In goal the
whole game because Seminole's back-up keeper
was out with an injury. Williams normally plays
the first half In goal and the second half on the
Held.
" I don't know If we can win tomorrow." said
Mcrllon. "But It was fun getting over the losing
streak. It could be Interesting today. This Is the
third lime in four years Williams has been in goal
ugainst Gulf, (the other times as a freshman and
as a sophomore). Their coach couldn't believe we
still had him."

S e m in o le
ham m ers
hosts in
'C la s s ic ’
From Staff ft#porta
LAKE GIRSON - The Seminole
High School girls' basketball (cum
pounded Its second straight oppo­
nent. mauling host Lake Gibson
75-24 In the opening round o f the
I’olk Holiday Classic at Lake Gibson
High School.
"T h e girls played w ell." said
S e m i n o le head couch John
McNamara. "It's the first time we've
had five players score in double
figures this year. We really balanced
the offense mil well. They were very
active on the Hour and really did a
good Job. considering the holiday
layoff."
The victory moved the Tribe (H-5)
Into a w in n er's bracket gam e
against Honilay-Hclhlchcm at 10:30
a.m. this morning at Lakeland High
School. Hcthlchcm. ranked No. 4 In
Class 3A. advanced by knocking off
Cape Coral-Mariner 67-59. If the
Tribe lost this morning they were to
play at 4:30 p.m. and if (hey won
they will play at H:30 p.m. tonight.
Seminole got another huge game
out o f Nikki Washington. The senior
forward hit for 25 |H&gt;ints. grabbl'd
11 rebounds, handed out six assists,
came up with six steals und blocked
lour shots. All o f this despite silling
out the last 11 minutes o f the game.
The other starters' statistics
weren't to shabby either. Sopho­
more point guard Tcuul^iiu Eason

FMt Photo

Nikki Washington (No. 44) and her Seminole teammates
put on a clinic in the opening game of the Polk Holiday
had 14 |M)lntH and live steals, senior
center Kay Kav Mullins laid I 1
points und grabbed nine rrlmunds.
guard Laliom a Faison had I I
points, seven rebounds and five
steals and forward Cindy Boone had
1() points and 10 rebounds.
"L a lio m a . Nikki and Belinda
Morgan played a heck o f a lloor
gam e." said McNamara. "Morgan (a
s o p h o m o re eal l c d up for the

Classic, crushing host Lake Gibson, 75-24. The Tribe is
scheduled to play a doubleheader today.

(ournumeull Is Jelling well with
team despite only being up a week. I
think she's really going to help us In
the long run.**
Morgan finished the game with
four points, six steals and seven
rebounds.
Sharlla Jones was the only Lake
Gibson player to score in double
figmVs. finishing with I0|s)ints»

County teams advance in Pizza Hut
If TONY DeSORMII
Herald Sports Editor
ORLANDO — Maybe It was weather. Maybe It was the
time o f day. the day o f the week or season o f the year.
Whatever It was. the Pizza Hut Invitational boys' soccer
tournament cranked up Monday with a slate of
unattractive games.
How unattractive was it? A total o f 12 yellow cards
(cautions) were awarded in six o f the eight games.
Three o f the yellow cards went to Seminole County
coaches.
In the process, three Seminole County schools —
Lyman. Lake Mary, and Lake Brantley — managed to
advance to today's quarterfinal round at Bishop Moore
and Edgewater high schools.
Lyman, ranked No. 2 In the Florida Athletic Coaches
Association Class 4A state poll, edged Bishop Moore
l-O. Lake Mary, ranked sixth tn the state, topped Dr.
Phillips 3-0. Lake Brantley, No. 10 In the state poll,
outlasted Boone 2-1.
Despite the victories, none o f the three county
coaches were pleased with the wins. As Lyman coach
Ray Sandldgc said. "W e won't win this tournament
playing at that level."
At least they won. Oviedo and Lake Howell suffered
heartbreaking losses, the Lions having a goal dis­
allowed In a 1-0 loss to Coconut Creek while the Silver
Hawks squandered a 2-1 halftime lead In a 3-2 loss to
Tampa-Chamberlain.
In other lirst round games, defending Class 3A state
champion Daytona Beach-Seabreeze bested Winter
Park l-O. Clearwater Central Catholic ripped Edgewater
9-0 and Tampa-Leto topped Evans 2-0.
Lake Brantley opened the tournament with Its win
vrr Room- ai Rlshnn Moore. Jlmmv Mclctlldla scored

53 seconds into the game and Scan McClaffcrty added a
goal at 15:42 to give the Patriots a 2-0 lead.
Unfortunately. Lake Brantley then dropped Into
automatic plloL Even though the Patriots outshot
Boone 23-6 and had n 5-1 advantage tn com er kicks,
the Braves cut the lead In half when Dusty Relneke
converted a penalty kick In the second half.
"W e Just went Into cruise control." said Patriot coach
Jim Brodle. "W e had some great opportunities, but we
Just didn't have the killer Instinct to put them away.".
Lake Mary didn't have that problem, taking a 1-0 lead
In the first half on Tony Bazilc's goal and getting second
half goals from Kevin Murphy and Jody DcBruln.
Still, Ram coach Larry McCorklc wasn't thoroughly
pleased with the result.
"It was like we were pluylng In slow motion," said
McCorklc. shaking his head. “ We still have that youth
in us. It's like w e’re almost afraid to go out and create
something.
“ Our defense played well. We didn't allow too many
dangerous situations."
While Lyman didn’t allow Bishop Moore any real
dangerous opportunities — save u penalty kick In the
second half — the Greyhounds didn’ t do anything to
put the Hornets away.
"W e played well enough to get to the next round,"
said Sandldge. "In the first half, we played all right, but
we didn't put away any o f our chances.
"W e had eight quality chances and wc only put one o f
them away. We need some guys to step up and score
some goals."
The only goal Lyman scored was a penalty kick that
Danny McAvoy knocked home at 42:40 o f the second
half.
Bishop Moore hud u chance to equalize when Marc

POLK HOLIDAY C L A IIIC
FIKST MOUND
SEMINOLE 71, LAKE OIBSON 74
Sominolo (7S)
.
Eoton 7 0 7 N, Foiton J I 7 II, Cilliiu 0 07 0.
Morgan 1 7 7 4. Waihington II 7 4 75. Boont 475
10, M ull!n»4J4II.Totol»: 77 10 7575.
Lofco Gibton (74)
Curlli 7 7 4 4. Wllliamt 0 07 0. Borry 1 00 7.
Word 1 7 5 4. Jontt 5 0 1 10. Botllck 0 0 4 0. Joo I
007. Tololt: 104 1474.
Sominolo
It IS 74 17 - 75
Lokt (Mbton
g ;
j r — 74
Throo point laid good — Sominolo I (Wothlng
Ion). Toom louU — Sominolo IS,- Loko Gibton If.
Foulod out — Sominolo. Morgon. Rocordt Sominolo 4 5.

Dolphins
glad for
off week
R f A T IV BN WI NB
AP Sports Writer
M I A M I — R a t h e r l l i un
basking tn the glow or their
first AFC East title in seven
years, or looking forward to
lliclr first hyc week In four
months, the Miami Dolphins
were In a had mood.
One reason wus the knee
injury suffered by leading
rusher Mark Higgs In Sunday's
16-13 overtime victory at New
England. Tests showed Higgs
has lorn cartilage in his right
k n ee, whi c h wi l l requi re
ar l l i r os e o pl e s ur ge r y and
perhaps sideline hIm
ihniughout the postseason.
But what really had the
Dolphins sore Monday was the
publication by three South
Floridu uewspn|MTs o f com ­
ments receiver Mark Cluylon
made In the locker room after
Sunday's game. The rrmarks
referred to Lisa Olson, a
Sea D olphins, Pago 2B

FO R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R TS IN Y O U R A R E A , R EA D T H E S A N FO R D H ER A LD D A IL Y
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Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Tuesday, December 29, 1992

From Midway to law school
L*gion plant kfew Year's party
ASANPORD — Tickets are now on ask:, and they must be
purchased in advance, far the Am erican Legion celebration on
Sanfard Avenue on Dec. 31.
The $15 ticket price Includes dinner, dancing to the lively
beat o f W e Three ♦ 1, party favors, champagne at m idnight
and a breakfast buffet.
For m ore Inform ation, contact the Am erican Legion Poet at
323*1653or stop by at 3874 Sanford A ve.. Sanford.

Wild timt set for Fun Worid
SANFORD - Fun W orld on U.S. H ighway 17-93 in Sanford
w ill present a free rare exotic anim al show from T iger's Eye
Productions on Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 10 and 17.
There w ill be more than a dosen w ild anim als on hand at the
Fun W orld Stage. Som e o f the anim als are on the Florida list o f
t endangered apedea.
David McMillan, a world-renowned anim al trainer, form erly
w ith RingUng Brother's Ctrcua. w fll be on hand to talk about
hts tlm e with the circus.
There w ill be plenty o f opportunities to take photos o f and
w ith these rare animals.

QED tests scheduled
SANFORD — T he OED tests, leading to a Florida High School
Diplom a, w ill be offered at Sem inole Com m unity College In
Jan. 2 5 .3 6 and 27.1993.
E ligibility fo r taking the tests must be com pleted by Jan. 15.
QED test orientation w ill be held on Jan. 20 at 11 a.m . and
Jan. 21 a td a n d S p jn .
For m ore Inform ation on the fiv e OED study program, call
8CC at 323-1450and ask fo r the OED office.

Toastmasters mMt at SCC
Sem inole Com m unity C ollege (SCC) Toastm asters Club
&lt;*6561 w ill m eet every Tuesday. 7:30 p.m.. at Sem inole
Com m unity C ollege. Contact RoaeOa Bonham at 323-8284 for
&lt; m ore inform ation

Hall looks forward to receiving his degree
him closer to his goal, a degree Center, an alternative school for
In law . He attended school and at risk children In G ainesville. A t
played football at a college In the Horlcon Center, Anthony
SANFORD - " I alwa;
l e ct ur e s, tutors, and g i v e s
M innesota. The follo w in g
m y future held aom etf
su m m er In a b lack h isto ry m otivational talks to students.
fo-ent for m e. eith er In aports or course taught b y Dr. Lurie ne R e m e m b e r i n g hi s a t t i t u d e
som e other profession," aakl the Sw eeting a t Sem inole Com m uni­ toward school as a high school
proud 26-year-old Anthony Hall, ty C ollege. Anthony said. “ I student. Anthony said. "1 can't
a third year law student at the developed a new-found respect e m p h a s i s e e n o u g h th e i m ­
Univeratty,of Florida Law School for the history and culture o f portance o f a good prim ary and
in Gainesville.
black people and decided to secondary school education to
Having grow n up In M idway, c o m p le te m y u n dergrad u ate these at risk kids."
he was a good student in ele­ atu dlea a t a fou r-yea r A f r i ­
Last summer. Anthony In a
m entary arm m iddle school, but can-Am erican college."
law clerk's position with the
tt wasn't until he entered high
In 1990, Anthony graduated Southern C en ter fo r Hum an
school' that he decided what from Morris Brown College, a Rights In Atlanta. Ga., had the
would be different about his part o f the Atlanta University opporunity to work with capital
future.
system in Atlanta, d a . w ith a punishment and prison condi­
He adm its that "A tthostfh I did double nu^or hi history and tion cases. He said. "T h is expe­
not apply m yself In high school paralegal studies.
r i e n c e has m a d e m e mo r e
and make better grades, I soon
Acceptance by the University sensitive toward the Institution
developed a keen Interest In m y o f F lo rid a L a w S ch o o l has o f capita] punishment and Us
social studies classes." In fa c t tt brought Anthony even closer to Im plem en tation ." During this
was a legal
course
g*»* his dream o f a career In the legal w inter break from school, A n ­
by W hltey Eckstein at Sem inole
thony plans to work with Or­
High School that Influenced m e
In addition to his heavy class lando's Haitian refugees.
load, he is also very busy as
Anthony is all sm iles when he
editor o f the black students' talks about receiving his Doctor
newsletter. "B lack Letter L a w " o f Jurisprudence degree from
note H igh School In 1985 where ana arnctca ranor ot
u m ofi the University o f Florida Law
he lettered in track and football. Law Jou rn al" which focuses on School In Decem ber. 1993.
Anthony has had m any expert- race, racism , and the Am erican
H is plans, after graduation.
cnees, all o f which have brought law. He la a volunteer at Hortxon Include practicing law In the city

o f Atlanta and studying for a
Ph.D. in African-Am erican histo­
ry. His ultim ate goal la to teach
on the college level an d ‘practice
law.
Anthony la the on ly sdn o f Ms.
V irginia H all w ho resides In
S an ford with h er d au gh ter.
Trade.

H R

Asrobtcs offered
The Ctty o f Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. W ednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m .
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Cost Is $3 per class.

Making music from
kitchen n adnofe
Tbs Kitchen Band haa a good
time making music from kitch­
en gadgets. During tbs holiday
season, thsy entartainad over
800 children plus othar gussts
at the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program (R S V P ) C hristm as
S t o r e wh e n t h e c h i l d r e n
shopped free for their families.
The band m akes numerous
appearances during the year. 7

T h e O ver 50 Dance Club dance is held every W ednesday,
from 2:30 • 4:30 p.m. at the Sanford C ivic Center. L ive music
by the Dettonlans 11-piece band. Donation 82.00.

Optimist Ciub moots weekly
T h e Sanford Optim ist Chib m eets every W ednesday at noon
at Shaney's on U.8. H ighway 17-92. Visitors are welcom e.

J a m i e S m S rtt and J a m e s
Dykeman. Sanford, boy; Mary
and D avie W alters, Altam onte
Nov. 29 — Darts and Nelson
Madruga. O viedo, boy
'--N ov. 30 — R ita and Tim othy
X i au g hl l n , W i n t e r S p r in g s ;

Couple’s bounty was food for the needy

Dec. 10 — Melinda Lee Brush,
Oviedo, boy; Nancy and Donald
M an te. Altam onte Springs, boy;
Maudr and Jack LaRocca Jr.,
S an ford, girl; K im b erly and
Peter Werner. Altam onte
Springs, boy; Sam antha and
M le k a c l W .k .n , A lt .m o n .e

DSAM ASSTt T h is letter Is
lon g overdu e. Q eorge and I
celebrated our 50th w edding
anniversary last A pril amd we
* » « * » suggestkm w e read In
y ° ur column. W e had a lovely
party at the Chicago Corinthian
Yacht Club, and our Invitations
read:
"Y ou r love and friendship Is
the on ly gift we need. However.
if you wish to brina aomctfalna.
p lea se m ake It an Item o f
non-perishable food that w ill be
donated to the n eed y."
Abby #
We ^
.

Dec. 11 - Vicki and Vincent
M a r s h a ll, L o n g w o o d , g i r l ;
Pam ela and John Anderson 10,
Altam onte Springs, boy; (Y in t r
and Peter MoUaa. Oviedo, boy

heavy carload to deliver. T h e
p e o p le a t th e p a n try w e re
»«m wH i t «iu» quantity o f food
w e brought In. W e thank you for
pufalMhhg that suggestion and
hope you win continue you r

M ich ael O llvera s. A ltam on te
Springs, girt; Brenda Kolota and
John Thomas, Altam onte
bov: Mary and Frank
V b n O ^ n . w in terS p rln gs, girl;
H daley. W inter Springs.
boy

H E

Mm

cSStal

mm

j

V

(IQ S ---

B Sr

ABIGAIL
VANBUREN

D E A R A B BY : At p rrcenl
party, a large bowl o f dip was
served with vegetables cut Into
small "s tirlw " — carrots, cucumbers, cte. lo my horror. I
saw people proceed to dip halfeaten vegetable Mlclu. buck into
the bowl o f dip!
This struck tnc ns being very’
unsanitary’ . Am 1 t«K» lussy, or
not?
R E PU LSE D IN VERM O NT
D E A R REPU LSE D : You are
not loo fussy — you're sensible.
When serving u dip. a spoon
should be provided In order to
allow the guests to spoon out the
dip onto small cocktail plates.
D E A R A B B Y ; The first tilin g 1
look for in m y newspaper Is the
o b itu a ry column. W hen the
cause o f death Is listed as cancer,
I alw a us wom der If the deceased
had been a heavy smoker.
I w ish that very Important fact
w o u l d b e I n c l u d e d In t h e
write-up. A m I the on ly person
be a virgin?!
w ho wishes tt w ere?

�4* - Sanford Harakf, Sanford, Florida - Tuwday, Pacambar 89, 1992

L if lil N o t lC ii

L if lil N o t lC ii
N O TIC I OP APPUCATfON
FOR TAX O lI D
N O T I C I IS H I R I B V
O IV IN , MM Thame* 0 . A. ar
Mary L. Rtotah, lha (wider at lha
M tawing cartlflcdtaU) ha* filed
•aid certtftcPtoU) tar a lax dead
ta ha laeued tharean. Tha carttftcata number(i) and yearla) M
id
AH
AaiO
ajaTTCW
wnuBMi't vim
Rtawwsvicr^iisvi
jAd^a^^vS^uSi^^Mc*r R
S^m,
iw
mw
praparty. and Me namala) In
which It waa aaaaaaad is/er* aa

NOTICE OF COOI
CNFORCRMfNT BOARD
M O C IIP H N I

T O : C a lv in J . McMannamy/Country WMt Funding or
tha ewnorlile# the following
described property:
Let 11 Bik O Woadmire Park
*nd Replat F I I I FO t l W
Grove Drive, lanferd, FL
RE: Coe# No. n a
The Santord Cade Entoreament Board * ai created hy
Sanford City Code, Ordinance
1U*. a* amended, a* autharteed
by Chapter til, Florida
uta*. The purpeae of thte
I* I* facilitate It
ot the cedn and erdlnancet In
farce In tha City of laniard. You

Certificate Na. H71
Year aft lawante: list
Oaecrlptlan at Preparty; LRO
U N IT IM T H I ALTAM O NTI
ORB ISM PO IMF
Name* in which assis ted:
Tracy t.Meare
All M (aM prapa&gt;(» being In
Me Caunty at laminate. State M

letmg the telleering Cade on
your property: Chapter tl, aac.
1M7» Chapter a, aac. a.t.t
lie iJ .la ) by eltowkg
debris. litter taaccutnui
the promlwe; tailing ta i
tain lha structure In a

Unleea auch carllflcateta)
than be radeemid aw arding ta
law, tha praparty daacrikad In
awch cartmcata(a) will ba aatd

m klMinat
UMdba
mtN
m9VI
«4
WM
RI9
TlUPIUUf ■
VNNBT Ol
Wm
OTW

Irani dear, Samlnata Cawnty
CewrthauM. Santord, Fierida. an
tha MM day at January, tVW M
11AJVL
Apgraxlmataty IttASS caah
wajd
Wm itaMWILw
OT wUI |P
vIot Imj,
the auceaaaful btddar at tha aala.
Full payment M an amawnt
*W*t ta lha htghael bid ph*

' w Bn iwi w f w iiffiiy non*
fled that a Public Hearing will
at the City at lanferd an
the !Hh day at J aweary, im , at
7:BB p.m. In the City Cam117.
City Hall. M l N. Park
I u I m J r w iH i mm
■wnvnif
upt*

w ithin 14 haura after lha
advert!wd time M Me aata.A ll
paymanla abatl ba cath ar gugrantaad tnetr^ansM, ^nada aey*
abta ta Me Clark M Me CircwN
Cawrt,
Oatad M i PM day M Decambar.HW.
(SCAD

8#id ivMinct if m M
WiiFfRfl

6ftit1 fRikt

if tocf ifli wncHufirti if fiw.
V«y arv henfcy t r im i la

^dgpn f*
Nbal
Sadfrf
n|
■ p in BBInV
BOT M
W •
* ffm
Hearing ta anwwr the chargee
and preaant yeur aide at the
caae. You have the right ta
obtain an attorney* at y tw

L i f l i l W o t f c it

L if lil N o t lC ii

N O T K I OP CO N I

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I WTM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN ANO POR

TO : Oary J. William* ar Ma
aemardl M Ma taltawlng daacribad praparty:
SM 'M LM M ANa’ M LM U
• IkSir I
TawnM lantard PM 1PO4)
aiiPalmetta Avanua,
lantard, PL
RE: CaaeHa. W -l
Tha laniard Cade Rntarcemant Beard waa created by
lantard CMy
USA aa
by Chapter MA Ftarida Statwiae. Tha pwrpaaa M Mis Beard
il I* IOT»HI*MOT Ifw OTffOTvOTffOTfT

M Ma cadM and nrdMancaa In
tarce In Ma City M lantard. Yea
yeur praparty: Chaplet II, aac
lra*h,*tc. tanccwmutataanMa
M

Yaw are hereby tarmelly
MbtaS M
wM
Jy
dI1
i In
aaM
----I^TnH
KiiiL
Nilw
RoWn^JI will

by Me
M Ma City M lantard an
Ma ISM day M January, tf*S. at
7 :« pm . M Ma City Cam-

^

IIT,

City HML SN N.
lantard, Ftarida,

*ff^S
tattan. Tha I earn will rat
M aatd
M tact and caaduatana at law.
Yaw are hereby erdared ta
"
Beard M Ma
iifi cii^ii^Bii
eld* M M a
Yau have Ma right ta

RyiMkhattaL.
~
rCtarfc
1A t t I*.
M Z -ltS

wwn^wf^p owtiitqpwisi m i ffPiP
aatd cartMcata(a) N r a tax dead
take laewed therein. The wrtttlcat^
r .r i^ ^ lM

praparty, and Me named) M
whkh It waa aaaaaaad ta/are aa
Caritflcata Na. IS7Y
Year M leawwtaa: 1

OTfl IT If# priVr OT OT© nWRBf

C

If y w da nM
V
m
datarmina H u t a vleiattan
it haa Ma patter ta taaua
yew ta

(at AM claims against tha
Ratals W ITH IN T H R U
MONTHS AFTIR TH I FIRST
P U B LIC A TIO N OF TH IS
N0T1CR and Ikl any ab(actlan
ky aa M^a^ga^adpgraaala wtaai
*this natlce It aarvad that
Me validity M Ms
-----*
*fli j||M«
iP
^BBfffta^K
^Bfew aMJf Ikw
ffwi

lurladtattan M Ms Cawrt
W ITHIN T H I L A TIR OF
TH R II MONTHS APTRR TH I
FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICI OR THIRTY
DAYS APTRR TH I DATI OF
MRVtCI OF ACOPYOF THIS
NOTICI ON TH I ORJRCTINO
PRISON.
ALL CAIMS ANO OBJ 1C
TIONS NOT SO FILID WILL
M FORIVRR BARRIO
M Ma Nattca hat
■
n,tf*t.
HAROLD W IU I AM BILL

m

N O T K I OP APPLICATION
POR TAX B IR D
N O T I C I tS H I R I B V
O IV IN , MM Tkgmaa O. A. ar
Mary L. Wetdc lha hatdar at Ma

It tha vtetattan ta not car-

N O TK IP O R
AM SM ItTRATION
Tha admlnlilraltaa M tha
BataN M HARRY I . BELL,
deceased. F i l e N u m b e r
n-ate CF, la pending In tha
Circuit Cawrt far Samlnata
Cawnty, Ftarida, Prebata Otvlelan, lba adiraaa M wbtafi la1
Samlnata Cawnty Caurihawsa,
M l NerM Park Avenue, lan­
iard. Ftarida **771. The names
M Ma paraand

11*7 by MtawMg |unk, dabric

M Me Ortwrt Cawrt

. Yaw have in* right ta
call wttn iiia i an yeur behalf a*
wall ae ta creaa aeamlna all
ii you da net
I may p
withaut you. Should tha
determine that a via lit Ian
exists. It haa the pawar ta laaue
Ordara rogulrtng yaw ta bring
tha vleiattan kite eamptlanca
S n i - l j —U
mB pOTOTT *
— - ■TWOTK
HtalVWII|
ffa
Itff
and craata a l l a n o n your
property up ta

CASI NO.S ftWPCP
PNBBATS DIVISION
IN RR: T H I IIT A T I OF
HARRY I . H L L ,
SSI7SM1-SS7R

tatavylbwa

wwd
abakSw N
m. A
law w
uw ua^a
M
VM %fMMfw
IIOT*
OTI
jyMMv
preparty up ta

FLI

i A. Ragland. PA.
M wtaw Drive
Fern Perk. PNrtde *7jgwS7

TetapbMta (4V) BPdtM

Fubttah: December B . It. laai

oez-ar
reeled by Bw Maw M Me Hearta w
a niOfaw
it e t a .
^a IL
taf w ta ta t^^O
pau w aw lata cempNaaea wfta

M Praparty: LRO

L O T ■*• HIIA
R ATH
T ____
BRYON
VILLAOR U N IT IP 9 W POS »

vtatatianbutiha
priar ta tha Public
Hairing will I
dHdaalwa
—— *
■M
fSTtPUffP
It veu have W
I*

+ S7
MMNViii
in
m
P lAMaAu
a- nnm
' iiii j
r r waiH
f w iw iv ve
A|tl| OT MOT OTMMTVT POTIM|N
bT
m
O

earning thla matter, ptoaw

iiti

ment at (4B7) MAMBA SHOULD
YOU D ICID I TO APPCM.
ANY MATT1R CONBIMRED
AT T H I A90VI HIARINO.
YOU MAY N IIO A VERBATIM RECORD OP THC FROC l IDINOS. T8STIM0NV AMO
■VIDCMCI WHICH R1CORD
II NOT PROVIMO RV TH I
C ITY OP SANFORD (P.S.

&lt;
ii

WPPiWI WCfl W TrlfU fll (If
IN
Id

takejwtdjta
Pull peyment M an pmeaM
ageM ta MP MMtaM M ptas

i

i

S

M

JEFFREY O. WHITE.
Ta: JEFFR EY 0 .WHITE ,
Addreee unknown
N O TIC I OF FOITIN O
You are hereby notified that a
gentian tar Pro la Dieaaluttan el
Merriage haa bean Iliad against
yau and the! yau era required !o
■arve a cegy ot yeur retgeme or
Bleeding ta Mw Petition upon the
Petitioner, DEBBIE L. W HITE.
*71 Lincoln Rd.. Caeeelberry.
FL n m , and tile the original
reigania or pleading In tha
atflca at tha Circuit Court an or
lha Hat day at January,

Dated At Seminole County.
Ftarida
Thh lath day of Pacambar.
ttfl.
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark at fhaCircuit Court
By JayeaClacklay
PuMWi: Dacambar n. If. Iff*
A January At*. Iff*
OIZ-tM
IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT,
IIB N TIIN TN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND F M
SRMINOil COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASI NO.: f H N K A H F
R AR N ITT RANKS TRUST
COMPANY, N. A., aa Trustee
tar Nm Florida Hauling Finance
Plaintiff,
ROBINL.CREIOHTON.et.il.,
NOTICI OF M L !
D
JMSLum Iw
alemuife. flOTf#
a*
IMPfrOI
!■ lOTTwOTr tfllvOTi
purauent ta a Summary Final
Judgment af Foradeaure en­
tered herein. I will sell lha
flMflOTTy ■IflMOTB OT OTmTimBOT

County, Ftarida. dascribedaa:
Let A Block JA CAM PARR
VILLAA PHASE II, according
u. N
—e.^Iataw
fwwl iwtertCOrPM le
e
Nw
M
IfNpriOT
If*
Plat tak a page* f7 and ta.
public records a! Samlnalo
County, Ftarida.
at public tale, ta Mw Mghaat and
baat taddw tar caah, at MwWaal
front doer ol the Samlnalo
County Ceuriheuaa, Sanford.
Florida, at l!:M am. on Janu­
ary *1. im
WlTNRSS my hand and oftidal am at add Court Decem­
ber tl.tftl.
(Cawrt lad)
MARYANN! MORU
aprfcot Mm ClrcwH Cawrt
|w
&gt;*e
Jagg
m
Ww
rmrew■
tm*#Im
Md
*UaR
*f!#
rw1
AaDeputy Ctart
PubMb: PiMiwSir If, Iff* A
January A tea*
M Z -ttl

IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SIMINOLICOUNTY,
____ FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
Pta Number H IM CP
IN R l: IIT A T I OP
LAURA DURST

PSRSONS W ITH DIS*
A B I L I T I I S N R 9 0 IN 0
ASSISTANCI TO PARTICIPATS IN ANY OP T H IS !

U* m\ P O t J E r * The
net repreaenfellye's ofrare set tarib beta
ALL INTIRBSTRO PER­
SONSARB N0T1FIB0THAT:
Mila

POR TAX M I R .

■ N O T IC I IS H « R t &gt;
OtVBN, MM H O T i O T i I
hattar MMe I
It D M M R ir IA H , SR,

a s r .d

HNandJarntpryAINS

_____________
D U -tta
N O TIC I OP AFFUCATtR N
• FOR TAX OR B 9
N O TICI II N9NS9V
O IV IN . MM Tkwpgs O. A. ar
^ U ^ k w ^ a t M a
^ M

N W

A n H I^
di M
MMa
praparijr. and Ma namafal In
l la/areaa

POI P S M

ammmtt

^

Kawng
, JtnwYaa
Urn
Aid S n Um
a
i^ i-^ w
OTU OT MOT OTipOTW M l OT

Me tatdayadFabwgrr, t m a t
1IAJR. •
AppPOT^MMtoty IlS M I d ill

FtartST**

-

Untaaa awch cartHtcatad)
,ta

Me lattiaaMbtddar at Maaato.
PaN payment at an amawnt

•R ikdM ta

'm,m:----

‘ MMa

wlthia id bddft after the

e rta T w d w l

i ta Ma dark M Mia Orewtt
A January A U . IF*!
OCXtW

IMtaSM day M Dh m -

or iurladkttan el Nile
ire regulred ta file Ihdr
lectlena with thla Cawrt
W ITHIN THR LATRR OP
THRRR MONTHS APTRR THR
OATI OF TH I FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER TH I
OATR OP URVICR OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTICI ON
THEM.
igf Mw

M Praparty: LCD
R O R IIN B R IA R

PH I IN tafl-T RUN N 71 DIO
14MIN S SRC • MtM FT N M
DRO MMW F S K ■ 14PT N SI
M O M MM IS BBC WISJS PT
N 4) M O U MIN S U C I MS
F T N U O M IM M U H C W
tf!J4 FT N N M O II MIN U
U C W MSJS FT N M M O S
MIN S U C W WM FT N M
M O n MIN M U C W NSR7 PT
N M O H B4 MIN IS U C W
SUM PT I M M O d4 MIN S
SRC W U M FT S I M O N MIN
47 SRC W 47AB PT N M M O W
MHISSRCWMR1PTB7 0 M
S MIN S4 U C W 4741 F T S M
M O 4i MIN 4 SRC R 4SJS F T S
41M O I MIN M U C W M l4S
FT N M M O M MIN M U C W
MJS FT S M OR# •MIN M U C
R4S4SFTSS1 M R M M IN W
U C WS14S FT S I ORR MMIN
M SRC R SIM PT SSI M O M
MIN 41 SRC W SIM PT S W
^M M
I is
r cM
wB
mO
.uTpMt sU I
O TOM TIN
IM
4S O M 4S MM 41 SRC W StJS
P TS M M R M M M 4 1 U C W
fUS PT N M M O 4 MIN B I
S4A4PTSMO— MINS7SRC
WSIRS P T N M O B O « M M M
U C W M JI P T S IS M S W
M M W NBAS P T 9 M M O M
MIN 41 SO CW M J I P T S II
M 0 4 IM IN H U C 9 T O M O
■till
Inl&gt;
j gW
w
TrpvRPta
yar i^
vagj^H
^Nrtiii
BHBPfllAMT
a
^ 0 1 C R TS?N O W M P t M PD

*(LR SS LOTS H4 * IBS
OR IIN BRIAR BUBO PH I P t
4i POS 41TO 44)

•t lltM am. an
ary *1. Has.
WlTNRSS my hand and atHilfll mm m Mm Cm ri Oi

tarll. Hit.
(Cawrt Baal)_______

s r j s . ’s . s r ^ ’
M. N M *

ia a 1""

of MMa: M
t i Cawrt
W ITHIN T H I L A TIR OP
TSIMB SSCMTHS APTRR THR
OATR OP THR FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICI M
THIRTY MVS APTRR TH I
D ATI OF URVICR OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
TNBRL
af Me
_________ IRNRM
wNh MMa aswrt WITHIN
...... .. J MONTHS APTRR TN I
OATS OP THR FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS N O TK I.
ALL CLAIMS. OSMANOS
ANO OBJICTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL R l FORIVIR
The data at Rta
ttan d tala Nadca
g jw a
Peraand Rap^aaanlative■
JOHN DURST
MMCkrtakwaaPatmPlace

ta

&gt;Na.si7
Yaardtaauaam: Has.
OaamtaReaef Pteeerty: L IO
LOTS 4 7 1 * ♦ N N 4 P T OF
LOT IS J W TURNRRS S U M
M 71P04a

A. WHARTON

. at (4WIMS-IH)
i Bar Ha.: m ill
r X M ,m

n
a . ia

ia

N O TK I OP
FICTITIOUS NAMR

C tL B M fT Y C P H U

ogna ly in g m a M a t a d t a w S S a ta b a a
Lge d e d p e S * baMMaapawwAarwaaditar
tmrnm. fkawvatar ragwh m

‘ K N W M i a ,

I I I

I M U l W K f ,

S U N

•H

I M

• ■ M S

j|y. mi, r£. V 'j MJrj

I K K

F

V N M I P ,

f I F A U M

• M I S •A ■ W
s

s

f f l B

S

grfcgj
abta to Rta Ctark at tag OrcwN
M art.
QgNd Rde UBi day d Oaaam
bar, MR.

I •

I K K

. *

—

F

^

g

g

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

(XASSnEODEPT.
H0UR8

M

fe N M L * M B U

T
S

ALL INTIRBSTRO P R I­
SONS ARR NOTIFIED THAT:
All persona an whom thla
notka le served who have abladtana that challenge MwvdtdIty ol the will. Mw gualltkattan*
at Mw paraand rapraeontptlvo.
vonuo. or lurtadktton ot Mill
Court are regulred ta i
eb|ectlen* with thle Court
W ITHIN THE L A TIR OF,
THRRR MONTHS AFTIR TH I
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER TH I
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All credltart ol Mw decedent
and other persons having riofme
a copy Pt Mda
natlce It served within three
mentha attar thedata el the flret
publication at Mila nolle* must
flta Mwlr dolma with Mita Court
W ITHIN THE LA TIR OF
THREE MONTHS AFTIR TH I
OATR OF TH I FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICI OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THR
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All ether credltart at the
claim* ar demand* agdnat Mw
fl la INmla
i ttTifi ,wi,wv
iTHiii fiii
ifiiiT
claim* artMi Mils court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTIR TH I
OATR OF THR FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICI.
ALL CLAIMS. OfMANOS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILRO WILL RE FOREVER
BARRIO.
The data ot Mw first pud ka­
ftan of thl* Notice ta December

Mlchad 0. Fowler, Reg.
Metafile A Fgwtar, PA.
P.O.Baxita
Ft. Ptarce, FLI
Tilephenei t
Ftarida Ear Ne.tCDflf
Fudlih: December a I*, im
D U IM
N O T K I OF C O M
■ N F M C IM IN T BOARD
PROCIBOtNM

TO: Victor Zafuto or tha
earned*) at Mw tdtaertng da-

.t l .l l BUN

CUMDMTUMAV
ft SUNDAY

SB IH

NQMfACCeTNQ

•cfwdrng mayMkMs HsnM AMwrtwr MMaowl ofanadMond &lt;tay
CanedefwnMugMNMRs- Payartylvdaya you ad rum atrda ewrwd
Uwkddeaenpdan tar taalwl mmfta. Oop^murt toSawaooeptebtotypo-

Tueadw tvu Frtiay t l NoonTha Oev I
•undwAnd ManSwSJOPJa
feiRtapygnf of andrrpr In an

•fdy and Pttfy ta Bw «Rant of Pm aeat of

31— PtTSOfUlS
Free medical care, transpor­
tation. counseling, privet*

plus living i
m ins
SIS Call Al
Nw « m

ii

33—Lost a Found
LOTT 11 Cat, Large dk. A while!
long h a i r , K A Y W O O D
e s t a t e s .................jqpjsaa
LOST - DeKhund mix, tamale,
while w/blach and brown
•pot* Leal aeon near Part On

^ • rtJto w a rd lN T lM S ^ ^

35— tpRCiftl WttlCRS
BECOMEAROTUT

For DalaiIt: 1SSO4»OT4
Florida Notary Aeaactaltan
LIVE MUSIC, vartallla I man
band. Farllaa. waddings,
club*. Lila rack, blaas,
saaab i , daoitarda. »*Maa*

a im .

Persend Representative:
RuMi Vankor*
II Lake VtateTrdl. IMS
Peri SI. Lucta, Ftarida S4*tt
Attorney tar Personal

ROTATE PAATY RATES
.m iR n s
.TOSSRtN
.B lftllm

37— N urury A
quid a r &gt;
SUN LAND BIT. 4 apoxlxge"*?
yn . ft up. tvncMd beck, iwififl*
toy» 8 mort. Mn Ii . Stt-HM

*5— B u t lm u

m m
Family buelnou ovaliable in
Santord area. Part lima
potslbk Incoma ta U 1.000
Sdl tor H I M Cash, tor lout
Ingulrio*only. Call Corporal*

JaaagbA- ~

Oatad W* 4d» day af I
(UAL)'

RS: Ceea.Na. **-}
The Santord Cad i Inter ce

Santord City Cuta.^OnSnanca
UM. a* emendiA aa autberiaad
by Cheptar Ml, Ftarida Stat­
utes The purpose pt thle Beard
le ta ladlrtata Mw enforcement
el Mw cadee and erdbwnoee In
tarce In Mw CMy el lantard. Y w
have keen charged wHh de­
lating Mw tattawing Coda an
your praparty: Chapter II, aac.
IT*7i Chapter 4, sec. S.1.1
(W lA i-a ) by dtawing funk and
ccumufala
ddbrls Id accumufi

pramtaae; allatlfla hi
to dmetapt tailing ta'maintain
sNvctare.
Yw are hereby lermdly r
lied Mid a PvMk Hearing

IdrabaccL
Pubilth: Oacambar If. HW
Dczm

71— H tlp WRIStBd

FUUT1NE
Victim Advecata In Criminal
JutIIco lyatam, Degree or
Eeperionco rogulrod. Sond
return* to: Blind Box SO.
Santord HoraM. PO boa 1447,
Santord, Fl. 1*771-14*7

IGEMTMEM. ESTATE!

la iH N -m i
AVON CHRISTMAS SELLING
START NOWI
CALLWdMSarWdSW
BABTIITTER. my hem*. Fri­
day nights, must have refs. A

full lime
Greet benefits and na axaarlaw train

ta na*
rectad by Mw tlma d Mw Hear­
ing ar M, priar ta Ma Hearing,
y w came Into canmllanm with

yw ta aeeurs yeur success.
Call Dele Myers *1P l-M U
R INM RV HELP WANTED •
Day* and nights. Rap. pro-

will trt
Main. Apply;
‘
7S7N. Hary 17-et, Lsngwaod

g

a

A January A a i t N

DIRECTOR
CHILDCARE Center. Exp A
Early childhood Ed. A MUST.
Call Ranaa:................377 aaal
D t IV in NEEDED
AG C A R R I E R S , a wall
established and growing
central Florida bated com
party offers you:
0 Sami Annual Pay Increases

d StepOH F*y

• Unloading Fay
P Vacation Pay
a Safety Bonus
• Spout* Riding Program
• Avorag* Trip 57 Days
P Lata Model Conventional
Tractors
II you hove 2 years tractor
trailer. OTR and snow and ice
experience plus a good driving
record, call:

_______ i-gaoere-fita_______

Lk. Residential Journeymen
Electklent need only apply.

l aatard Electric....... m ild

Eip. Cooks
Chwri«adtr-T|pB
S trv B fi
Apply In Person: CruyWIngt.
US* S. French. M O im

Exp. Electronic Ttch
Or KtSE^Sfi CarissR SfA

HAPPY ELVES CMkkan Ctr.,
Lab* Mary needs organized
Riparieacad Care-giver. Al
tamaan hours. H I -m a
Musi be abi* to pau poly
graph and banded. »17*H
LADY M + to live in w/*ld*rly
lady. Frw rant and util, plus
small salary. Rat's Mi 4717
U M MAINTENANCE

Mutt have l yrt CQMMER
CIAL axp A transportation
Turff IMasters...
..JSAI44I

fefaaarrwepk.caiim-dii
C H IL D CARR WORKRR

NRBM D Miring Immpdlata-

tv IC d lW IT IM i____________

Must ha axparlancad with
frktten cranes, up ta IN tan
capacity. CH Sandltard at Mw
lob all*, bride* ever St. Jehn*
River, U IMA Wednesday,
tram ISAM- 11 naan and
1PM-IPM.................... RM

ytoiattan buf MwddpCttacvri
priar ta Mw PubMc Haaring. Me
Itaaring m...........
sRsBsNana
,
II yw have guaahani con­
cerning this mailer,

THEGREATAMERICAN
INVErJMfNT

BINGO

---- *---a fli^
ta
BIO
T m--l*-*1---

mentalUV): ____
YOU D IC IM TO APPIAL
ANT MATTIR CONSIMRIO
AT THR AROVI HIARINO.
YOU SUV NIRO A VERBA­
TIM RIOORO OF THR PIIOC II DINOS. TRSTUMONV ANO
RVIMNCI WHKH RECORD
IS NOT PROVIMO BY TH I
C ITY OF SANFORD (F.S.
taMNf).
PERSONS WI TH DIS*
A R I L I T I R S NBROINO
AftlSTANCR TO PARTICIPATR IN ANY OP TM ISI
PROCRROINOS SHOULO
CONTACT TH I PRRIONNIL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
AT SSS-SSM 4S HOURS IN
A0VANC1 OF THR MRRTINO.
PubNehi Oiaiwtbir H A M .
MSB January A im
O U TS

tea hw arsesm-stee

* FABRICATOR*
Quick raises from e groat
boat I Large mfg. company
offers full benefits leal
AAA RM FLOVM INT
f e » W .» R llT „ im w
* FRONT OFF ICR*
Variety keeps you smiling
here I Fantastic bonetllsl
AJU EMPLOYMENT
W*W. MMl ST., ttl 1171

ta anewer Mw chargai
wan* yeur dda at Mw
Yw have Mw right ta
, at yeur earn

’Id tavy Baw
and create a llan an yaur
praparty w ta

Experienced, energetic Indl
vlduel. with strong dental
background, lor comprehen
sl v* s u r g i c a l and r*
constructive practice
Schaduallng, Insurant*. II
nanciats. and patient relations
a mutt. Computer e plus.
Salary and benellts common
•urate with experience,

wAPPUCATOtttHNI*

We are leaking tar mature

dafermlno that a vtalattan
aetata, Mbw Mia pawar ta tarn
Ordara raguklng yw ia

Dtntil Riceptionist

Highly mollveled Technklan
or laptawer with a minimum
of 1 yr*. experience in Seel
and Installation Cell ICRS

____ ____ sat law.
Yw are hereby ordered ta

Yau have Mw right ta
cd t wMnaaaaa an yaur hohatf a*
wall as ta croo* examine d l
If y w da m t

tasm-sse*______________

Nothing auccaodo Ilka success.
We're stall Intoour lrd decade
of Irdnlng auccoesfut agents
No license7......... We'll hetpl
WATSON REALTY CMP
REALTORS_________ »■**»*

at add

iyM
MNi
mR-B
b
NUf R
KUR
WUOf
vTE^w
W

DmiUI Asshtant
Dynamic tall tlorior needed
lor comprehensive Implant
and reconstructive practice
Strong general dental end
surgical background a must.
Available Jan. 4. Salary and
benefits commensurate with
experience. **I-4|*| ar

SIMINOLI COUNTY

Hiring

Board at Mw CMy at lantard an
Mw IlMi day at January, tffS, at
7:SS p.m. In Mw City Cammlaatan Chambera, Ream 117,
Santord City Kdl. M N. Fork
' Ftarida. can-

7 1 -H t ip W t n f d

ELECTRICIAN

A

KIWANISCLUBOF CASSELBERRY
1R TOTAL SMOKE FREE BINGO
HALL FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT

I g j p M h J a c k p o t*
n

C

H

H L NEOULM O A M U OTY IM EACH
|100 •BROO •UBO JACKFOTR ANO

TW O WINNER 6PUT8
EVERY FRIDAY EARLY BIROS AT 6 PM
■■ORBTIAIB PARK • CAM BLiOIIIY. FL
■TARTTNQ FRIDAY •JANUARY 1803

SM OKE

9 Hll » I 9 .
S

lacralary at Slate,
Tallehetoee. Ftarida. In aecardanca with Mw pravletant el
Mw Fktlltaua Name Slaluta.
Ta-Wll: Sodtan W M , Ftarida
Sldutaa 1M7.

I _£___ • Rub
erllbln 14 baurg attar lba
M Raw at lba aata. AR

I K K

.

____,— jlnhwdnaatatuas.
Country (luk Rood. Lake Mary,
SamlnataCddty. Ftarida. under
•ho Fktmoue Name af Mlaatan

S ta
Mw

U P U I F P V R I M F .

Orlando - Winter Park

IwwfA
X-- *
---iw
iii ■W
IW
W•

lattan. The Beard
tostImany and at

J. Preetay. Wbltam W.

I K K S ' M

NOTICI OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tha administration at tha
atlata of Dorothy A. Quad,
dacaaiad. File Number
*1 *M-CP, la ponding In Mw
Circuit Court tar Samlnalo
County, Ftarida. Prebata Divi­
sion. Mw addran el whkh It P.
O. Drawer C, Santord. Florida
11771-M19. The names and
eddreaaoa at Mw personal repre­
sentative and Mw paraand rep­
resentative'* attorney ar* eet

Ssminole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

1 -I0 0 -7 7 9 -K 5 0

' B UlT-’
r - -eL *
arlTfalSHt f^e iU^taiS9 ©f
whkh Ml North Park Avenue.

LffMS^INW oS»rP9tM

OMM

INRE: ESTATE OP
DOROTHY A. QUEST

SBsuuSSH1
ta

CarttncataNa.NI
Yearat jeawanq : H I

u

“ IM rffHOTT TJ'TiW s. r

“ r r j T r t Country Club
Manor UnM I PR It FO SI NS
Country Oub Clrde, Santord.

l

mwvm osrTiffCwiiii iw i \

N a.H U
Yaarafl
*r
Oaecrlptlan at Preparty: LSO
LOT S LAVAOA COURT P I •
POM
H m m in nfMdi siisttMit
Theme* Walker, Janice A .

taaM M (4tn SN4MA SHOULD
IYOU D IC ID I TO APPBAL
ANY M A TTIR CONMDCRRD
A T THR ABOVR H IAR IN O,
YOU MAY N R ID A VRRBATIM RICORD OP T H I PROCRIOM RA, TRSTUMONV ANO

CASINO n-JCTAM-M-O
IN RR: THR MARRIAGE OF
MRRIRL. WHITE,
PetHloner

CLASSIRED AD S

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
F M SIMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FRORATR DIVISION
■lAm
b u m pr

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
IM N T IIN T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND P M
SIM IN O LIC O U N TY.
FLORIDA

FL-

WOTKB OP APPLICATION "
FOR TAX M IB
N O T IC ■ IS H IR IB V
01YIN, that Treat FBO Henry
C
wpir i. « m
hatdar at Nm tati— j - -*» --*■-*^* *-— t
aaid wrttftcptols) Nr a tant
tabt hawed Rween. Tha writ*eata numbar(a) and year(t) at
.
igfR*
and Bw nameU) In
SWMw
a rIft wW
r e4
1la/areaa

auwlga
KPIN
. ' ’wflw*^w
ta^NrRefv^BP M
PM
Pw
^UNnr^wvR

II NOT PROVIDED IV THR
CITY OF SANFORD (P.S.

M*4tM).

PCRSONS W ITH D IB A B I L I T I I S N I I 0 I NO
ASSISTANCI TO PARTICIP A TI IN ANY OP T H IS !
P R O C IID IN O S SHOULD
CONTACT TH I PBRBONNIL
OFFICI ADA COORDINATOR
AT SSt-MM OS HOURS IN
ADVANCf OFTMf M IITIN O.
PuMWi: ObtahWar tA a . » .
HUS January ANN
DU-74

'III j

L if lil N o t lC ii

L if lil N o llc t i

FREE

696-5188

�twiford HsraM, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, Dacambar 28, 1992 -

71-HolpWonHN

71—Hslp W ssftd

eLEOALSECRETARY*

TU PREPARER REC0C0

Good organliatlonal tklllt are
needed I Don't pan (hit one
up! Call now I Benefit*I
AAA EM PLOYM ENT

to Eat

SJ year* exp. Send retume to:
- i l l Dlrkaen Dr, Suite Ol
DeBery, FI. M ill
T E A C H E R S • l P re K in
dergarten, lull lime and 1 part
time permananent lor alter
noon Care. M F. Exp nece*
very. Mu*f be neat and orga
nttad.M AM M orM tsau

wtw.twbST., m ain

UVCINCOMPANION
11 deyi'wk. Good pay. TLC
Home Companion*, m tow

medical RtKpnooin

TELEMARKETERS

For toty orthopedic oil Ice*.
Call Sharon. 747 **1*
MOVE U F Ta Management I
Rattaurant A Retail. Man
‘ agement Job*. U ! K atari.
Fee BBC Mgmnt. *44 OPTS
N A NN Y. Fall lima, llealble
tchedule lor 1 children. Expo
rlance, reference* and own
Ira n tp o rla tlo n regulred.
Ftaeae caN Mea-Pri. i m f m .
M I-M U Naedad Immedlataly I

211—Good Things

KIT *N’ CARLYLE* bjr Larry Wr%tM

To f t hr. plut bonut. Experl
once preferred, but not nece*
tery. Many petition* availeble....................... 4 &gt; M W44

&lt;***&amp;

o f

7

wath dryer. Quiet 0(1 Lk
Mary Btvd. &gt;MwV. MO 1744

ju s r w K P M ft *
K M fH

K x * \ ,
•AIR HOC It I T T A I L ! - Like
new, 1' X Ito' Great X-Mat
lift im Q A O r a t a M________

SANFORD. reomete te abate
lie e u M t. M/F. Lg bdrm.
W/’private bath Incl. T V ,
phone, lull tout* prlv. *70/wk.
plu* 1/) util, and eecurlty.
Call 111 ( t i l

• • A S T S T R O L L IN • HI

■troll ■•■badlyptSa* M l-411*

T tle p h o n s S a k s
Incoming, outgoing. $400 *400
per wk. Cell Judy: 40744* m *

ttnat. CJrt utoHen tM dally, 41*

H
H fW«
r paoHnS!t
iMUHIIfi TMM
n nl^nTr
aptt./cendai , C a u a lb a rry
•raa. Moat tat 11 Saerlfka,

TERMITETECHNICIAN
Experienced preferred but
willtrain. Cell M M M I

• FROOVCTNM WORKER e
Can you read a tape maature?
Thlt large cempeny will train
you Ivlty en their product 1
AAA EMPLOYMENT
&gt;W W.MRl ST., SM-II74

TERMITE TECHRICIM
preferred. Cell
m 0047er m u fJ___________
WAREHOU1E AND O EN ER AL
LABOR H I L F N E I O I O t
driver*. Alt *hlft*
available. Dally pay. no
Report ready to work l ; »
Industrial Labor Svc., (Oil
French Av. No phono call*
eW AREM OUSIe
Heavy lining, tot* ol overtime,
friendly total Benefit*. tool
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
TM W.MRl ST., MS-Itte

S a k s P s f io f i

Electronic A Appliance Expe­
rience Required. Full lime.
Salary plut commltalon.
Ream lor advancement, me
|or medical benefit*. Apply In
FARMERS FURNITURE
SSME,FfWklSIWS.i

SscurttyOffictfs
Fart time. Rlvercretl tecurI
ty, tMO Ramlblng River Dr.
M ir a s ____________________

With equipment. Temporary

* Janftor-Maiiit

SECURITY

Part time. Sun. Thurt. Night*.
Sanlord Area. Llcente pro
leered. 1 407m sis? Lv. m*g. .

Full lime.
41*- E. let SI.
IH U M
I* W O R K E R S N R I D I O I I I
DAILY WORK, D A ILY F A Y I
Report el 4AM: 1100 S. French
Ave. Sanford

Shoot Mttsl Ptfion
Experienced, rooting related.
Driver* llcente required. Call
14*7) 44401*4

J A C U t l l , M a lt 4, Maroon
marMetlko. auto timer+|et*.
w/waad cab.siaw. OBO take
paymawh/codt. » t t t

All rental and real estate
advertliemenli are *ub|ect to
the Federal Fair Homing Act,
which make* It Illegal to
edvertlM any preference, llm
na tio n or dltcrlm lnallon
bated on race, color, religion,
•ex, handicap, familial etetue
or natlonat origin____________
M O V ! IN SPECIAL YOU
W O N 'T S l t l K V I l Geneva
Gardena Apta., M I N ______

StlO wit. plut depotlt, Utllltlea
Includad, ni-41 14er N H W
SANFORD
1 room efficiency
plut private bath. Complete
privacy. H I per week plut
•HOeecurlty Includet utilities.
_________ C e lira n t f ________
SAN FOR D
1 bdrm. houte,
complete privacy. I block
Irom new hotpllel. *110 per
wedk plut UJO tecurlty.
Call i n net

• J o v H IH T T B S T T tS r
Haw carpet A point. Family

ptwaaacurtty Call
RENT.OR LEASE,

ott.SPVme.eeeaaet

f»—Aartmutt
U n fiwTMilw d / ile n t

FU TO N

llg e ld a tle a t a le l

A FFO R O A U C IO U S R E N TS
III A k^W l ML. jHBMJMMm
E X P E N S IV E

) M * C M M V I OVEN

A P A R TM EN TS?

NOT
• I A ) Rdrm. Towntomoa
• Spark IInn Fool
• E xcltlng Clubhouse
• Largo Eat-In Kitchen*
• Sell Cleaning Oven*
•Wether*/ Dryer* Available

blind*, SITS me. — M i t t

io-TotovklON/

'J I

IuW
t il
m Ks Uliin
✓ Newly remodeled apts.
✓ O n e and two bedroom
✓ A sk about our 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 month leases
✓ C lo se to mqjor hwya.
and thoroughfares

trim . N K «| Meexfct-rai
PLYMOUTH R IL IA N T • '

A n d O u r S pm olal O f f e r
w ill H a v e Y ou L a u g h in g
A II Th e W a y To The Bank.
I St M ll l ll tl S It t*111 On
A l l 2 B e d r o o m 2 B a t h Apt

w

T jS S

b

b

NOMONEYM M

lacept tax. tap, title, etc.
w w m it s u b i Sh i • 4 deer,
auto, a ir, tterao. O N L Y

Newly Renovated!

2714 Ridgewood Aye.
Sanford

S 2S S 1

XHNHM

tei*

Is M

LOlWWOOWtit. MARY ere

a sm m m

r .j
' —7^

SPCoil l T TW A R l

W Hm"

C M U A lfn K *

Laorrataet Freeetfa. MI-4HS

321- 2720

REM OOELINA S F fC tA L ttT,

322- 2420
m m m
"n K IB S c ti
a W liaioH / mO T ts;

Lawn lorvteo
a a p rn n s rn e a s r

OuaHty work, lair prkat 14 hr.
eve. NaTa. Call MI-441*

N toR tolLjg m

I l l i ci t) 0 \

1,
s 1

1

h

It*

i \

1&gt;&lt; i i

; / / 1 t i - ' 1/ /&gt; • 1

1

i

/ ,.n

\.

!• 1 1

■ M ft flS P IM M IM IM M N M M U A A A M M iilM M d lT R

M I-iR C r M t lR M l
V R h k k i/ C a m p e rs

I
Only 11.77*
dew• to •M inted buyer I
SMVtto. W T L •% Mtoraet tor
M yra. SAtom., cdnfrel M/A.
Large career i n and heat I
O N LY M tJM II

I8 U V
m

L

.

IE

OVERLAND W , M It mint
cewdHMw. LOADED. I4K wU

n.

I f M o n

• m e TER R Y as IL. Stoapa A

•® B?r

« 5 T r s r i t o 3 5 i i r , *-fc

KA rT 4 I

L

J| A

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98 - Santord Hsrstd, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, Dscsmbsr 29, 1992

By Chic Young

BLONDIE

Medication causes
irregular heartbeat

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by Mart Walker

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by Art toftttm

TH E BORN LOSER

by Chartot M. Schuli

PEANUTS
BUT I KNOW A 6000
6UARP 006 WOULD NEVER
EAT CHOCOLATE CAKE..

FOR DESSERT TONIGHT LIE
HAVE CHOCOLATE CAKE..

HOW ABOUT A WORTHLESS
GUARD P 0 6 ?

MW

BEK A M EEK

AaluAldaM

rS A LOT MORE.
THAW VIGILANCE-

THAT MARRIED MEM
IMS LONGER "THAU

DEAR DR. O O TT: I have an
Irregular heartbeat that began
a fter cataract repair. I take
tnderal and b lood p ressu re
medication. I'm In m y early 80s
and never had trouble before, so
w hy should m y heart behave
abnorm ally folknrtng this sim ple
procedure?
DEAR READER: The retailor
between your cataract aurgerj
and the irregular pulse m ay tx
p ur e s e r e n d i p i t y : T h e twt
events, which are common Ir
the elderly, m ay have occurm l
one after the other by chance.
However, I am Intrigued b )
your unnamed "blood pressure
m edication.” Could this be the
culprit? Possibly.
Indent! Is a beta-blocker used
to treat heart trouble and high
Mood pressure. It does not cause
an irregular pulse rate; rather. II
calm s the heart.
On th e o th er hand, other
anti-hypertensive drugs -- such
as diuretics •• are notorious
c aus es o f h e a rt -r h y t hm Ir­
regularities, som e o f which can
be dangerous.
C h e ck w ith y o u r family
physician, who should be able ta
sort out the puzzle by exam ining
you and determ ining the cause
o f your Irregular pulse.
DEAR DR. O O TT: A gentle­
man I know had bad vision and
went to an ophthalm ologist for
v e r y e x p e n s i v e gla sses. He
began using herbs and now has
the driver's license he was un­
able to get prior and he doesn't
need glasses. It seems like a
m iracle, and I w onder what
herbs would be beneficial for
better vision.
DEAR READER: I am skeptical
o f any relation between herbs
and Im proved vision. Neverthe­
le s s . y o u r a n e c d o t e Is I m ­
pressive. I suspect there's more
to the situation, though.
For exam ple, m any m edicines
can adversely affect vision toon e
degree or another. Such drugs
Include dl goxl n and alm ost

every compound used In treating,
heart ailm ents.
Is It possible that your friend
was taking
that he m ay
he began the
m ight have Im proved his vision
if the m edicine were to blame. (I

don't advise patients with visual
difficulties to discontinue their
m edicines without first getting
approval from their doctors.)

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v i i l l li II 1

SHOGU- MEN

W here your work or career Is
concerned today. It Is best not to
take verbal com m itm ents as
in the year ahead there Is a gospel. Some people with whom
possibility you might become you may be dealing m ight tell
involved in two unrelated en- you only what you want to hear.
ARiM (March 31-April 19)
dcavqrs. Although both are apt
to be sm all, each will have Usually you are not the type o f
person who holds things In. but
surprising potential.
today you m ight be moody and
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. secretive.
It Is best to voice your
10) Irrelevant Interests might be
frustrations, provided that It Is
uppermost in your mind today.
done logically.
This may cause you to perform
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20) ir
poorly where your serious -re­
your friends plan som ething
sp on sib ilities are concerned.
expensive today with which
Keep your priorities in order.
you're not In accord, don't be
Capricorn, treat yourself to a
reluctant to bow out or you
b l r t h d a y ' g i f t . Send for
could later regret your
Capricorn's Astro-Graph predic­
participation.
tions for the year ahead by
O U llin (May 21-June 20)
m ailing 81.28 plus a long, selfYour dignity and reputation
addressed, stamped envelope to
could suffer today if you behave
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
poorly In front o f others. Should
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
som ething aticky develop, keep
44101-3428. Be sure to stale
your head and behave rationally.
your zodiac sign.
1Junc 21-July 22) It
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19) Is Im perative that you have
You nave good earning potential careful plans today or else you
today, but there Is a chance you might later find yourself In a
m ight waste m ore than you p ick le trying to sort out a
accumulate due to a aeries o f disorganized mess.
sm all miscalculations.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even
P a c t s (Feb. 20-March 20) though you m ight presently be

BIRTHDAY

ARLO AND JANIS

by Jhnmy

m m

looHTGsnr

m aking progress on an Impor­
tant endeavor, keep your hopes
and expectations within reason­
able bounds. Make allowances
for negative variables.

VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In

your -one-to-one associations
today, a failure to comprehend
the other person's point o f view
could be detrim ental to both
parties. If you keep an open
mind, you w ill encourage coop­
eration.
LISRA (S ep t. 23-O ct. 23)
Don't spread yourself too thin
today by attem pting m ore than
you can manage. Overburdening
yourself could result In aggrava­
tion Instead o f accom plishment. .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22).
Beware o f Inclinations today to
be wasteful with resources that
have been entrusted to you by
others. Treat their funds at least
as prudently as you would your

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If dom estic conditions are
n ot as h arm on iou s as they
should be today, ask yourself
honestly if you 're the instigator.
The answer m ight surprise you. I
(0 1 9 9 2 . N E W 8 P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

PRANK AND RRNEST
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P f-C L A H W .
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learn a little about squeeze play. h ° P £ l «*&gt; PJtanote a trump trick
A good starting point la Hugh
r« " West. But theae defenders
K e l s e y ’ s book “ Simple
play as lf they can see through
S qu eezes" (914.95. G ollancx. ihc backs o f the cards. A t trick
800-374-22211.
lw o’
switches to a trump.
Kelsey lucidly explains the key West ducking your king. You
aspects o f the subject. And as he ,ead another spade, but East
says, most sim ple squeezes play * ln* jo d returns his second
themselves. Usually, while you h?*rt.jW est w inning and playing
are cashing winners, you need to * third round, killing the spade
watch for only one key honor. If ru ff In the dummy.
It hasn’t appeared, try to&lt;run - Now It looks as though you
your other suit. Maybe an oppo- ««*&lt;* the d u b Onesse to work,
nent has made the "w ro n g " gu » Is that a realistic hope?
discard.
.
Rem em ber. East opened the
T h e penultim ate chapter is bidding. He must have the club
useful too. explaining how to king. Instead, just run all your
defend against squeezes. Finally. r e d - e u l t t r i c k s . b r i n g i n g
there a ir 20 problems on which everyone down to two cards. The
to test yourself.
dummy w ill have the A-Q o f
Today's deal from the book clubs: you w ill hold the spade 10
gives you an Idea o f what to »n d d u b two. But what wUI East
expect.
keep? He cannot retain both the

(0 1 9 9 2 . N E W S P A P E R
TERPRISE ASSN.
m

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By

By Jim MtGGtok

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                    <text>Sanford H erald
Serving Sanford, Lake M ary and Sem inole County since 1 0 0 8
85th Year, No. 106 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
INSIDE
□ P e o p le
Go easy on the shears
Cold-senslllve plants arc apt in get damaged
when the temperatures drop. In Iter gardening
c o lu m n today. T rlc la T h o m a s c au tio n s
gardeners not to he too hasty to prune these
plants.
See Page 3B

Boulevard closed Tuesday
SANFORD — laikr Mary Boulevard between
U S. Highway 17*92 and South Sanlord Avenue
wdl he closed Tuesday beginning at 9 a.in.
Traffic will he detoured to Airport lloulevard.
C re w s b u ild in g the S e m in o le C o u n ty
expressway will be placing beams lor a bridge
over the bnulvard. Traffic .may resume on the
road alter *1 p ut.

Accident investigation continues

Mall a step closer
Agreement
presented
tonight
By NICK PFEIFAUF
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD — Sanford shoppers
are getting closer to their own mall
today. Another step toward starting
work on the Seminole Towne Center
mall will be taken tonight. A
redevelopment agreement Is to he
presented to the Sanford City
Commission for approval.
In dealing with the mall project,
the City Commission also arts as a
C o m m u n it y R e d e v e I o p m e n t
• Agency. As such, the commission
will change hats and serve as the

agency during the regular com ­
mission inerting.
Hill Ham m er, from Sliutts At
Itoweii. a legal firm In Orlando, will
be making the official presentation
of the agreement. It covers all
aspects of the project required bv
law as well as the many agencies
which have certain Jurisdictional
rights.
Included In the agreement are
developer as well as city agreements
on construction of the mail, access
roadways, the sale ol bonds for
financing the project, and the many
legal requirements to assure com­
pliance.
In the redevelopment agreement,
the mall Is described as " a regional
shopping center consisting, at lull
build-out, of an approxim ately
1.250.000 square loot multi-tenant
retail mall.''
Commissioners were given copies
See Mall, Page 5 A

City to air drug-free
zones and sentencing
By NICK PFBIFAUF
Horald Stall Writer
SANFORD - The Sanford City
C o m m is s io n w ill d is c u s s
expansion of drug-free zones
tonight. Police Chief Sieve Har­
riett suggests better sentencing
of drug users would be a better
deterrent.
•
The matter Is scheduled for
the commission workshop meet­
ing. It Is based on a resolution
passed In October by the City of
Uoynton Ileach.
While the Boynton Beach City
resolution adopted a change

By QEORQE DUNCAN ~
Herald Stall Writer
LONGW OOD — A verbal exchange between
two Longwood City Commissioners and City
Administrator Jim McFellin may have prompted
an angry letter to McFellin by retired business­
man Jimmy Ross
Ross sent the letter to McFellin with copies to
Mayor Paid Lovcstnmd and Commissioner Sieve
Miller. The letter Implies McFellin has objected to
alleged conversations between Ross and the two
elty officials
Tile letter stales. “Commissioners Lnvcstrand
and Miller have called my attention to the fact
that you often use my name in conversations. It
is my understanding that my name has been
used as II 1 did not have a right to communicate
with anyone I choose or meet with anyone I
choose.

Tree reservations accepted

Two killed in crash of small plane
JA( KSONVII.I.h — I lie wreckage of a small
plane and two bodies were found today alter a
10-hour search hampered hv darkness mid
heavy fog.
The plane went down In a swampy area near
Craig Municipal Airport, said Howard Curry, a
spokesman for the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office.
The plane was reported missing at |o ;;jo p in.
Sunday, he said. It was approaching from the
east and had Just made a right turn when It
vanished from radar screens.
Rescue workers searched for the wreckage on
foot and In four-wheel drive vehicles, but
darkness and dense fog hindered the search.
The plane and victims were finally located
around H a.m. near the end of the run wav. he
said.
The names of the victims have not been
released.

From s ta ff and w ire reports

•

IN D E X
.......S I HoroscoD*....
Classifieds....... .4B.BB Movies............
Comic* ttTTtrtt.... .......OB Nation..............
.......people.....................
.......SB Police.............
Deaths...............
Dr. Q oll............. .......SB Television.....
Editnrlnl,,,
4A W eather.........
Florida...............

\jJ.

At the groundbreaking of the Rescue Outreach
M ission's shelter today tor womon and
children on 13th Street in Sanford, Mother
Blanche Bell Weaver, center, gets ready to
swing a sledgehammer. On hand for the
ceremony were Cal Conklin, left, who sits on

By VICKI DESORMIER
Herald Staff Writer
SA N F O R D — The nation's
brightest high school students
are gloomy about many of the
same domestic ills that drove
their parents to vote In record
numbers tills election — their
economic futures, violence and
AIDS.
In Sunford. Seminole High
students who are In the top 10 of
the senior class, say they are
optimistic that things won't get
much worse than they are.
The 23rd Annual Survey of
High Achievers, issued recently,
found nearly one-lhlrd of the
students hnd considered suicide,
more than 40 percent hud expe­
rienced violence In schools and

□ Bee Students, Page BA

Cindl M ariw ether

Partly
Cloudy
For m o n weather, • • • F ob* 2A

Derek W estfa ll

"Y ou tire put on notice that I will exercise my #
rights under the First Amendment whereever
and whenever I choose, and If you don’t like It.
von have a problem."
McFellin saitl lie had never used Ross' name in
his conversations with either Lnvcsirnnd or
Miller.
"N'u. nor directly, lint his nam e." McFellin said.
"Y ou are further advised ilia) Article I. Section
23 of the Florida Constitution is very clear. I will
uui tolerate your intrusion into my private life."
McFellin said he has never Intruded into Ross’
private lilc.
"Absolutely not." lie said, when asked.
Ross concludes Ids letter by saving. "Y ou may
he a big wheel down in city hall, lull you have no
control, direction or supervision over me. a
private citizen. I repeal. I will not tolerate your
intrusion Into my private life. My private life
Includes my meeting with anyone whom I choose
and exercising my First Amendment rights."
McFellin shrugged off the letter, saying il
"doesn't rale a response."
The clly administration said lie had never tried
lo Interfere with Ross’ freedom or association or
speech and doesn't intend to.
McFclltng said he "h as no idea" what pro­
mpted llu- letter. However, lie said Ross might
have thought some ol the discussion at Monday
night's commission meeting could have alluded
to him.
Ross has been linked lo Lnvcstrand and Miller
by Longwood Police Chief Greg Maiming who
charged l hat both men follow the advice, if mil
the directives, of Ross. Holh men called the
charge ludicrous.
Ross has an unlisted phone number and could
not lie contacted.

Probe co n tin u es in C h ristm as gas leak
Herald Staff Writer

Partly cloudy with a
high in the mid 7()s.
Wind northeast 10
inplt.

the mission’s board of directors. Don Nolle of
Habitat for Humanity, who has volunteered to
help build the sheltor and Mayor Bettyo Smith.
The shelter, which will house 27 clients in tour
dormitory-style rooms will cost $250,000 to
build. Weaver is still looking lor donations

B right stu d en ts o p tim is tic
country w ill not g e t w orse

By VICKI DaSORMIBR

Slightly warmer

□ Bee Zones. Page BA

McFellin
issued
warning

Shelter groundbreaking

SANFORD — One person remains hospitalized
following an auto accident Christmas Day In
Sanford. Robert Watson. *17. was listed in stable
condition this morning id Orlando Regional
Medical Center.
Saturday. Watson was reported to lx- in
serious condition.
Watson and Ullvses McCray, it passenger in
the second vehicle, were airlifted to ORMC
following the accident. A spokesperson at the
hospital said this morning that McCray was
treated and released shortly alter his arrival on
Friday.
According to Sanlord Police. Watson’s vehicle
collided with one driven by Johnny Lee
Williams. 22. near 8th Street and Cypress
Avenue late Friday afternoon. McCray was a
passenger in Williams' vehicle.
Initial rejMirls said Williams was not seriously
injured.
“ The accident Is still under investigation, and
I don’t know what charges will be filed in
connection with the case." Sanford Police ( ‘apt.
Ralph Russell said this morning.

SANFORD — The Seminole Soil and Water
Conservation District will reserve packets of a
dozen tree seedlings prior to .Jan. (i for its
annual tree sale Jan. H and 9. The packets may
he reserved by calling 3 2 1 H212.
Fitch packet contains two seedlings each of
southern red cedar, river birch, dogwood,
redbud, red maple and Shumard oak. The trees
will be distributed from 9 a. h i . until 2 pan. at
Mlg Tree Park near Longwood. Red Hug Lake
Pitrk near Casselberry, and in Oviedo id IIn­
former First Federal of Seminole office ill 77
Geneva Drive.

from 200 to 1.000 feet ns the
distance around schools and city
property for the drug-free zone,
it also proposed the Florida
Legislature lake action to make
It a statewide proposal.
It suggests other cities pass a
resolution, "s tro n g ly urging
legislators to Increase the dis­
tance requirement for parks and
recreation facilities and public
bousing within the municipal
boundaries of the city."
The original purpose of estab­
lishing drug-free areas was to
allow for stricter |ienalties to tie

SANFORD — Christmas Day might have been
quite an explosive holiday If a Sanford Police
officer hadn't stepped out for a breath of fresh air
and not found any.
According to Hattallion Chief William Ellenburg of the Sanford Fire Department, a repre­
sentative of the Sanford Police Department called
them on Friday morning to report a strong odor
of gas In the air outside the station. They
believed that the smell originated at the
Therni-0-Tune Gas and Appliunce Companv at
414 W. 9th St., about a block from the police
station.
Eltcnburg said that It appeared that someone

t

had Intentionally opened the line of liquid gas on
one of gas trucks that was parked In a locked
fenced area at the facility.
There are no leads on who might have done
that. Ellcnburg said, but an Investigation Is
continuing.
"T h e situation w as . never very serious."
Ellenburgsatd. "but tt could have been."
Robby Robertson, manager of the company,
said that he knew exactly what the problem was
when be drove up and saw the truck.
"Il took all of two seconds to shut the tiling
dow n." be said.
He said that be estimates that about 200
gallons of the gas bad been released. He said that
Il would take about IO to 12 hours for that
amount of gas to get out.

"1 hope that It was someone trying to fill a tank
to stay warm-rather than someone trying to hurt
people." Robertson said.
He noted that the day before a lawn mower bad
been stolen from the property and added that he
"can handle people stealing things, but not
people trying to hurt others."
Robertson said that be and Ills safety team do
not believe thut the valve on the truck could have
opened by Itself.
"Som eone came In and Intentionally opened
It." he said.
Elleuhurg said (hat a two block area was
cordoned off for about a half an hour while the
leak was brought under control and explosives
experts declared the area safe.

�■

9A - Sanford Harald. Sanford. Florida - Monday. Oscambar 28, 1N 2

,

■_____________

N E W S FROM THE REGION AND A C R O S S THE S T A T E

Associated Press Writer

Solar Energy Cantor Introducad

study o f the river and how pollution, tides
and other factor* affect the river.
There are problems along the length o f the
l ,Th8. bl f * L « » # • * " .
w a v e t r e a t e d t h e S t . J o h n 8 river, including m ercury conttmatlon In
Lake Sawgraaa to Lake Monroe In Brevard,
Orange. Sem inole and Volusia counties to
—
----- --------- ---- —
# -------- --------- high sewage leveta and heavy m etals in
now
w e
h eve
to
pay
th e
c u y . « . J oh n . « d n u m o n -

_________

82

-

JACKSONVILLE - T h e St. Johns River

COCOA — If It's energy efficien cy you want, plan to check
out the new FloridaiS
S olarE
Center com plex.
o U rBnergy
n ergyr
The state-funded research institute on the Brevard Commu­
nity College campus w ill offer a sampler o f com m ercially
available energy technology.
"O ne o f the goals o f this building Is to dem onstrate to the
citizens o f Florida what can be accom plished right n ow ," said
deputy director Philip Fatrey. "A ll o f the efficiency measurea
are off-the-shelf technology. W e haven’t done anything bizarre
or used any technologies that are not available to anyone."
Construction Is to begin next month on the 97 m illion,
80.000-square-foot office com plex fo r an opening In m ld -lO M ,
•aid spokeswoman Ingrid M elody.'
The energy-efficiency measurea are expected to cut electrical
consumption by twp-thtrds, cam 978,000 a yea r In utility Mila

18

s S ra w S : t l » V S 3 S tH H * -._ ..

I.r o ,.

f

p r ic e . 9
P^ h L m^
it h e r lv flow
nowtna
river la
la being
hetno .
,
Many o f the problems are In the tower fit.
northerly
in g riv
river
fg j
f
® T h e &lt;nortlMily/.;fu|puig.,
er JS. btnng
- x * i i i i a ............. Johns basin, which run* from Palatka to
‘ and dam aged by the com bination
where the river em pties Into the Atlantic
itlty h
o f the
quantity
urc m aterials
n a w a that
u m flow
now,, or
.. _
. . . ..... ...........
Ocean, east o f Jacksonville. Tidal action
dumped o r poured, Into Its SOO-mlk d iz j^ rfw a a te .e n y fro iiT_____________
O n ta ilite a a y_ .
ilfoisth '
- in e oiggesi prowcm la w e’ve treated the results In some o f the river’* problems
mxgux,
at. Johns as a toilet or garbage can for the because It can’t quickly flush it* content!John Adait. o f the environm ental group
Mat 100 years and note w e have to p a y the ran ts Into the ocean.
Stewards o f the St. Johns, said little Is
p ries," said Pat M cSweeney. * spokesman
The lower St. Johns h at to deal with
actually known about the S t Johns R iver,
for the St. Johns R iver W ater Management pollution from paper mm*, hundreds o f
w hich has an average one Inch fsli per each
District in Palatka.
farms and the 640,000 people who live tn
m ile from Its atari In Indian R iver County to
The federal g overnment recently turned Jacksonville.
tte mouth near Mayport. .
. down a request from O ov. Law ton C hiles to
Fish in the n m n w « w w
"
add the river to the NatJoral Estuary con tain h igh le v e ls o f h eavy m etals.
pesticides and PCBs.
Although the river has been viewed as. a
programThe toxins could be one o f the
ygJmnljrff retoureg, pcov idln^ rffiPMiftkHH gm j
a livin g for fishermen, U also has been seen
That would have given officlala about 91 that m any fish have ulcer* and tumors, said
b y industry and Individuals as a w ay to
m illion a year for five years for an bvdepth B ob Brody, a w ater district scientist.

building." Mel
dem onstration
since It opened In 1978, but th e m ilitary needs the land and
offered m oney fo r relocation. T h e Legislature kicked In 94
m inion for the new ahowptoes.

Oultt pi mtmorlM fci epe himbnd winn *
ORLANDO — T w o sisters salved the perplexing problem o f
what to do w ith th eir late m other's H om es b y i**t* g th* m to

su p p o sed

to p a y T or it s e lf

‘a costa have m ore than
I from the origins! bid.
ran outers
a t the
epartment o f Hebtth and

an
P er the past 90 d i
FLORIDA system hss
onrod tts best
etempa and cbecha ha

’ ~^V.

G AINESVILLE —
on In terstate'7 9 •
authorities said.
N o one was ssriot
about a h alf m ile ac
But traffic was bac
south o f Lake C ity

m r’

a

o f the prm ect w ffi p r y

t

r-

m ltte c -o n ia fo r m a tu
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which It ik iit f thg route
Pram A m n M M P n n

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"T h e crew o f thla atrplane
have bt f t ah
and

■ --------------

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mission.

Patchy
PfrtJjr 5
Tonight

B A . - * ...

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u 4 1 0 9 a jn .. 11:49 p.m.; tosh
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n

highs. I lil4 a . m » Ili4 3
wa. 8 0 8 a jw .. 6t39 firry:

tAm y|j| t |0W|y dissipate as high

fliM jL m .

—— p.m .: lows, 8:23 a m

by
of
c Q
oy the
i ne University
um vcmiy 01
Florida Agricultural Research
and JCducstfon Center. Celery

rmttmi U II

R ecord ed ra in fa ll fo r the
period, ending at 9 a m. Monday. totalled. 10 o f an Inch.
The temperature at 10 a m.
tod ay w as 87 d egreca and

hS

cw STtw a
o ***.

„
rirtVirTSi
«****• car

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m

MM
Orlando International Airport.
M in
Other W eather Bervloe date:

3 ^ feet and real

STSZ

■ S u rtn eyrn aB an eh i W aves arr
3-4 feet and sem i choppy. Cur­
rent la to the south, with a water
temperature o f 64 degree*.

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Sanford Harafd, Sanford, Florlds - Monday, Decembst’ 28, 1992 - a A

w ieaBM r t.'?
:-tor&gt;ia *. ^

-v

ttM N v a s n

u

^ *

Ratall thaft charged
With a little halp
from hla friands

Sabrina Hampton. IB, 2821 Dollar W ay. Sanford, waa
charged with retail theft by Sanford Police on Thursday.
Police aald ahe concealed item s o f clothing and beauty
supplies In her purse and attem pted to leave the W alm art on
Orlando Drive. Sanford, without paying for them. The Itema
were valued at $83.99, the atorc aald.
She waa transported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
and held on B100 bond.

Santa, who in his off-tim e Is Lt.
Doug Bishop o f the Sanford
Police Department, gats some
a ssista n ce In p assin g out
tu rkeys, to y s and can n ed
goods at the American Legion
Post 53 in Sanford. His helpers
on Christmas Eve were Tony
Bruno, to Santa's left, and
Commander Jim Smith and
Bob Barrett, to his right.

Domestic vfolpncp iltogMl
John Andrew Knight, 47. 1817 Harding Ave., Sanford, waa
charged with dom eatlc violence by Sem inole County sheriff's
ofllcem on Friday.
Deputlea aald that when hla w ife arrived home at 5: IB a.m .
on Friday ahe found the television blocking the door. W hen ahe
tried to m ove the TV , her huaband told her to get out o f the
house and pushed her to the ground.
He was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
and held on $3,500bond.

HeraMPhsiehy MaherSHeeUne

Forgpry* other charges made
Abel Pena. 31. BOO Airport Blvd., Sanford, was charged with
uttering a forged Instrument, forgery and theft by Altam onte
Springs Police on Friday.
Police said the management o f the Ramada Inn In Altam onte
Springs said he used a stolen credit card to pay for his room
and room service.
He was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
and held without bond.

Slptprp aquabbla luma vtolant
Barbra M cCollum BamolInski, 43, and Frances Marie
McCollum, 49, both o f 313 Homewood Drive. Sanford were
charged w ith dom estic violence by Sem inole County Sheriff's
officers on Saturday.
O fficers said the sisters do not live In Sanford, but are visiting
here tem porarily.
Deputies said the tw o women, who are sisters, got Into a
verbal argum ent. T h ey aald that Sam olInski said that
McCollum hit her about the head and arms. McCollum aald
that Samollnakl hit her first.
Deputies took both to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
where they were each held on 82.800bond.

Couplpbattlpp
Jam es Frank "P o o ch " Young. 37. and Darlyne W hite Young.
37. 3806 Cypress A ve., Sanford, w e n charged with dom estic
violence b y Sem inole County sheriff's deputies on Friday.
Deputies said the couple got into a verbal fight when the
husband arrived home w ith another fem ale. The fight turned
physical when the husband announced he was going to give
her car to the other woman.
The tw o were taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
and held on 83,BOO bond each.

Prison releases ex- televangelist
Jim Bakker to visit his ill father
B y A asssstotod P ress__________
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Form er televangelist Jim
Bakker was allowed to leave a Minnesota prison
Sunday to visit his elderly father, who was
hospitalized in Chariotte w ith a broken pelvis.
Bakker, accom panied by a auperviaor from the
Federal Medical Priaon In Rochester, Minn.,
briefly visited w ith hia father. Raleigh, who waa
injured in a car accident, said the form er
televangelist's attorney, Jim Toma.
He declined to aay where in Charlotte Bakker'a
86-year-old father waa hospitaltied.
Bakker waa to return to prison late Sunday.
rurt judge
Last week, a U.S. District Court
Judge reduced
Bakker’a prison sentence to eight yet
years. His
attorneys said then that the form er P T L leader
could be eligible for release as early as next
Christmas.
The reduction waa the second for Bakker. who
sentenced In 1089 to 46 years in prison for

Officer
kills 2;
is slain

fraud.
Bakker'a attorney* argued that the form er T V
evangelist, who bilked followers out o f m ore than
8150 m illion, has displayed exem plary behavior
in prison.
Bakker waa convicted on a 24-count Indictment
charging him with overselling lodging guaran­
tees. called "life tim e p artnersh ips." at hla
Heritage USA religious retreat In South Carolina.

TU R TLE RIVER. Minn. A Bureau o f Indian Affairs
officer shot to daeth two
p e o p l e In a b a r a n d
s e rio u s ly w ou n d ed tw o
others before he was slain
by a sheriff's deputy.
L t. D elw yn D u dley, a
42-ycar-old officer at the
Red Lake Indian Reserva­
tion. shot up the Turtle
Club with a pistol and a rifle
early Sunday in a rampage
S h eriff Dwight Stewart said
m ay have stemmed from a
dom estic dispute.

Prosecutors said Bakker diverted m illions in
m inistry funds to buy expensive homes, care.
Jewelry and vacations.
Prosecutors said 8265.000 in partnership funds
waa also used to pay form er church secretory
Jessica Hahn to keep quiet about a sexual liaison
with Bakker In 1980.
Bakker resigned from P T L after that sex-and-money scandal became public.
He and hla w ife. Tam m y Faye, divorced earlier
this year.

Drugehprgppfllpd
Mlcheal Derrick Brummett, 38, 104 Tedworth C t„ Long*
wood, was charged w ith pnssrsslnn o f leas than 30 gram s o f
martfuana b y Sem inole County sheriff's deputies on Friday.
Deputies aald Brummett waa stopped for a routine traffic
violation when they found a baggie in hla pocket which
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held in hsu o f 8800bond.

DnlInQ In i M

m

V is ito r
n o t w a n te d
a t

p r is o n

1i—l.

property oturggcl

lU y n o o d OM U C u n y. MS.. 17
IT Sem inole Darden. Sanford.
I w iti) crim inal BOUCIvAu Ou gilCI CMSwbUu S Iti BwOgdl
PbUoe said they found him tryin g to sell a camcorder on the
street near Lake Triplet and Sunset D rive, Casaelherry.
He told officers, who were operating In
capacity, that he was acting aa a i
who had access to TV s, VCRs and other merchandise that had
been stolen feom a warehouse, but which had not been
reported as stolen.
Police said be told them that he had not stolen the Items. He
agreed to sell a cam corder to the officers fo r 840.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 81,000 bond.

Warrant arrests
• Jam es Anthony Bradley, 38,3841 Kings Road, S anford,1
arrested on a w rit o f bodily attachement In connection with
contem pt o f court charges. He was held without bond at the
John B. Polk Correctional racUity.
•R u ssel David Pllk, 33, 303 Satauma Drive, Sanford, was
charged w ith (allure to appear In court on charges o f battery
and dom eatlc violence. He was held In lieu o f 83.000 hood at
the John E. Polk Correctional FaciUty.

Ku Klux Klan cross
is toppled again
to wtn a court order allow ing it
C IN C IN N A T I A. c r o s s
erected b y the Ku Klux Klan In a
downtown square was toppled
8unday In the latest o f several
attacks during the past week,
police aald.
Ron Lee. vice
prestddnt o f the U 3 , Knights o f
th e K la n . baaed In n ea rb y
Hamilton, com plained that the
c ity h asn 't done enough to
protect the cross.
" I f c iv il righ to w ork s fo r
mlimritfeff, It Baa to work for
white people, and far the Klan.'
he aaid, Lee said hia group plans
to aue the city.
The Klan received a perm it to
erect the cross after using the
argu-

the square during Hannkkah.
Tha m eaorah hasn’t been dis­
turbed.
A man who knocked down the
1 0 -foot w ood en cross e a rly
Sunday waa cited for disorderly
conduct, police S g t Pete Ftaher
T h e cross remained o o the
grou n d u n til Sunday n igh t,
when four m en erected a new
rei* h m &gt; |g reinforced w ith steel
and a tyyk f be harder to topple,
Lee aald. Under |*r " »
perm it, the Klan m ay keep a
o o the square through
The Aral cross the Klan raised

JUDY
N M tN C tA L
U M IlB IM IO r fR

zo aso n&amp;o N 0M 4 { 5 0
4N08TVU
\

STARKE - Wanda Bads adm ils 'that she once earned the
nickname "W icked W anda." but
says she la now livin g proof that
prison rehabilitation works.
So ahe can't understand why
the warden at Florida S tale
Priaon w on't let her visit her
betrothed on Death Row. much
leas marry him there aa ahe had
planned.
Her past Include* an Incident
n which ahe got her son oul o f a
. uvenlle deten tion cen ter by
ilowtng out a. window with a
shotgun blast.
"A ll that w a* more than 15
y ea n ago." says Ma. Eads, 49.
"I'y e been straight and sober for
16 years. I've got a Job. I'm
studying for a college degree. I'm
a different woman than 1 was
back then."
But despite seven uneventful
visits with convicted murderer
Frank Valdez before prison of­
ficials teamed o f her past, she
waa told early last year that ahe
was no longer welcom e.
"S h e's not the kind o f person
you want to lake the chance on
v is itin g ." said F8P Superin­
tendent Everett Perrin. "W ith
her background, and the escape
thing, U'a the kind o f risk you
don't need to take."
Although Ms. Eads was never
prosecuted for springing her son
from the detention center, she
did serve five years on a bur­
glary charge in the early 1970s
and has been arrested several
tim es on other charges.
But now, Ms. Eads is working
full-tim e with an air conditioner
service in West Palm Beach and
la studying psychology as a
part-time student at Palm Beach
Community College.
In fact, prison o fficia ls in
southern Florida have been so
Impressed by her rehabilitation
that she's been invited to apeak
to women inmates In Lanlana
and at Glades Correctional In­
stitution in Belle Glade.
Ma. Eads is w riting to Gov.
Lawton Chiles to try to m ove her
planned wedding along.
"I'v e held AA~meetings Inside
prisons, dozens o f lim es, and
nothing ever happened." she
told The Miami Herald In an
interview for Sunday editions.
"I'm one woman. I'm no danger
to anyone."

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IN TMI CIRCUIT COURT
ORTHRRtOMTRRNTH
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�a a - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, December 28, 1902

Editorials/ Opinions
NAT HENTOFF

Don’t always believe the children
EDITORIALS

Airport noise
versus progress
F o r n ew co m ers w h o m a y n o t rem em b er.

In New Jersey. North Caroline. Tennessee and
oth er states, prosecutors have successfully
convinced Jurors to “ believe the ch ild ren " when
parents o r day-care workers are accused o f
sexually abusing children.
d e a fly , there are tim es when children should
be b elieved . M any ere h orrifyin gly abused
sexually. But In outer cases — by reading the
trial transcripts and Interview ing people tnvotved
on both sides — I have been convinced that the
accused are bein g denied even m inim al due*
process. W hat happens la that som e therapists
are able — o ver m onths — to persuade children
to believe aa truth w hat never happened.
The therapists — whether w orking for law
enforcem ent or brought in aa experts by the state
— them selves m ay believe the charges from the
beginning, end th ey w ork to break through (h e
children's "d e n ia l" defenses.
In San Diego, an Independent grand Jury baa
Investigated the cou n ty's protective network and
has Issued a aeries o f reports. T h e conclusion la
that because that system la “ out o f control, with
few checks and little balan ce." m any cases o f
alleged sexu al ch ild abuse result In those
children being abused b y that very system
because they are taken aw ay from parents w ho
are eventually proved to be innocent o f the

charges,
One o f the grand
Jury reports focused
on " T h e C a se o f
A lic ia " — “ a parade
o f h o r r ib le s In a
system that must be
fix e d ."
Usually, the find­
in gs o f th is grand
Jury would have been
known prim arily to
residents o f the San
D iego area. But CBS
News broke the pat­
tern o f most televi­
s io n c o v e ra g e —
news or fiction — or
f C learly, th ere
ch ild sexual abuse
are tim e s
c a s e s . In s te a d o f
w h en children
automatically
should be
b e l i e v i n g the
believed, j
c h ild re n , th e CBS
News team checked
out the grand Jury
Investigations and perform ed a notable national
public service In Its tw o San Diego reports In
Novem ber.

M illions were thereby able to see. as the grand
Jury put it, that "over-reaction in the name o f
p ro tectio n " b y the system , Including p ro­
secutors. "frequ en tly brings severe and lasting
Injury to both child and fam ily."
CBS News told or Alicia, who at the age or 8.
waa severely raped and sodom iied by. she said, a
stranger who had clim bed through a bedroom
window. "H e r description o f the Intruder." said
the CBS report, "closely resembled a convicted
aerial rapist. A footprint hla alee was round
nearby. But Jim Wade, her father — a Navy petty
officer with a drinking problem — waa at home
when the attack took place. And the authorities
Im m ediately suspected h im ."
Having been accused. Jim Wade was pre­
sumed guilty. Alicia was taken from her parents
and assigned to foster homes and to a county
therapist who. alter 13 months o f treatment,
finally heard the child say that her daddy did It.
Caro! Hopkins, a m ember o f the Investigative
grand Jury, noted: "T h e therapist kept telling the
child she'd feel better If ahe'd Just oay. 'Daddy
did It.' I think the therapist waa ao convinced the
father did It, she never listened to the ch ild ."

JA C K A N D ER SO N

Workers’ comp ruined
by the unscrupulous

Ya\fl?Mo\fa

BiLL.

HARTFORD. Conn. — W hen It com es to
hogs at the trough draining the workers'
com pensation system and triggering a fiscal
nightm are for states and businesses, the two
biggest guxxlers are doctors and lawyers.
So lucrative la workers' com p (hat lawyers
are scream ing their services from billboards,
bus placards, newspaper oda and on com ­
m ercial breaks during the daytim e T V . The
com m ercials, the equivalent o f electronic
am bulance chasing,
are aim ed at people
peopl
w ith tim e on their

HODDING CARTER

Our obligation to stop Serbia
LETTERS

School bus stop tragedy

the tortured land that w as once Yugoslavia w ill
detennbw not on ly the
o f m illions o f
people there, hut quite lik ely o f m illions more
In lands as for distant aa the Indian subconti­
nent and the Eurasian land mass at what was
onoe the S oviet Union. It w ill also reveal the
m h iw u il m u n ty n f n ^ f
ronwiCTKT.
T h e laauels sim ple. A n are goin g to stand by
mnA allow the continued mass murder o f
Hoenlana by Serbs, and after them quite
probably o f Croats and Albanians and Hungar­
ians and M arM ennlans livin g In the newly
s e p a ra te d c th n le e n c la v e s o f th e o ld
coat five , w hatever tts nature. H aving dithered
and delayed bar so long, It la no longer possible
to envision a peaceful o r tid y outcom e, abort o f
appeasem ent m u cap itu lation ' to what the
“ realists" shandy pronounce aa inevitable.

w t im pel the Serbs are Asreei th eir ** " *? that
r t r ca u a slsju st m ay he irratlonel but It Is no
H o r T T S m much taste far a m ilitary
low dew n w ith the Serbs am ong our Euro*
m a t t e s , th e nations that logically should be
thing th e lead In farcing a solution. T h ey have

Berry's World
rernment actually tried to go to
how noble the cause.

the U.N. Charter, as hum anity Itself and as
self-interest. On the latter, one sim ple point.
The kind o f "n ew world chaos" foreshadowed
by Serbia's "eth n ic cleansin g" is a w orld out o f
control, one m ade safe for predators and
Insecure for all others. Such a w orld la
particularly uncongenial to econom ic coopera­
tion and econom ic developm ent. And yet
S e rb ta 'a e x a m p le ,
unchecked, w ill be
t e m p t i n g o n e fo r
v o ra c io u s d e m a ­
gogues and angry na­
tio n a lity grou ps
around the world. It
u n fo rtu n a te ly a l­
ready Is o f great In­
terest to the least
savory o f the factions
m a n e u v e r in g for
control In Russia.
As for the appeal to
hum anity, w e Ignore
It a t g r e a t p e r il.
Are we going
T h e r e w i l l b e no
to stand by
excuse o f Ignorance
end allow the
this tim e, an excuse
continued
th at w as no m ore
m ete murder
than a fig le a f for
of Bosnians
m any Am erican o f­
by S e rb *? f ic ia ls d u r in g the
Holocaust but that
w as a reality for the vast m ajority at their
fellow-Am ericans. No, this tim e w e w ill all be r
oom pUdt In the shedding o f Innocent blood,
because w e are all on ly too aware o f w hat la
transpiring in the Balkans. The phrase “ m oral
m onster" was invented to describe w hat w e
w ill becam e If w e continue to stand by aa *
observers w h ile the slaughter unfolds.
It Is w orth noting that, retroactive scorn
notwithstanding, circum stances
m od no
teas m urky and the options iequally unappealH itler, lie n
in g to those who sought to a|
no leas sophisticated and decent than the
statesmen who now advise us to steer clear o f
m ilitary Involvem ent thought that reason
clearly dictated accession to G erm any's rape o f
Chechoslovakia In 1038.
T h e truth, now as It was then, is that to
stand firm la to dak much, including a war
whose coat could be high to all Its participants.
But. Just as In 1038, to back aw ay la to
guarantee a much higher coat In blood and
treasure in the future, aa w ell as shame and
dishonor.

to be done to save
i Im perial Serbia's

mm
'as/
doing ao are as plain aa

It la our responsibility as s great pow er to
lead. That means at the United Nations. That
means w ithin NATO . That means w ithin the
nation o f Bosnia, a land w e have recognised
diploma tically and lo which w e ow e m ore than
a mournful burial.

U n s c ru p u lo u s
doctors and lawyers
are am ong a variety
o f reasons w hy the
$60 trillion a year
w o rk e rs ' com p
s y a t e m la on the
brink, w hy it's w ip­
in g out state budgets
from C a lifo rn ia to
Maine and pom s an
in tldlfH ii hidden tax
t The two
on businesses.
biggest
Q u ite s im p ly ,
qu
z
uzzferaaro
there's big money to
doc t o r i and
be m ade o ff the Inju­
lawyers
ries, real and im ag­
in e d . s u f fe r e d b y
workers. And our
_______________________
continuing Investigation shows that some
law yers have worked the system brilliantly.
Ada playing across the country portray
successful claim ants lounging on deck chairs
aboard crulae ships and on South Pacific
beaches at sunset. One offers a free trip to Las
Vegas. Another features a law yer Jumping out
o f a cake and whisking the Injured worker o ff
In a Cadillac w ith three beautiful women,
after he tomes o ff hla crutches.
In California, Investigators have even un­
covered schem es In which law yers and
doctors teamed up to enlist the unemployed
to Ale phoney claims. One clever California
o u t f i t ra n an ad o f f e r i n g to h ire
warehousemen. W hen the applicants arrived,
they were told that the Jobs were filled, but
the interview s didn 't stop there. “ By the way.
how la your health?' the Interview er asked
the applicants. Do you have any back
problem s? Do you have any headaches?
insom nia?" The ploy generated a fresh crop
o f workers' com pensation claim s.
Thorn on the insurance side o f the street
have th eir own lawyers, ao they can't dismiss
outright the value o f good legal advice to
someone who la legitim ately Injured.
John Oerdner. senior econom ist at the
W orkers' Com pensation Institute, argues:
"E very dollar that's spent Investigating or
disputing the claim la a dollar o f coat to the
system that doesn’ t ( o to pay a worker for
lost w ork tim e." In California alone, claim ­
ants' law yers reaped a 81.5 billion bonanxa
last year.
•Workers' com pensation was created to be a
no-fault system , m eaning that no matter
w hat ranaart the Injury. If it happened In the
workplace the em ployer would cover It. But
law yer* have profited from this no-fault
system by exploitin g the ticklish problem o f
w hat Iqjury la work-related and determ ining
Just bow disabled a w orker la — laid up for a
w eek o r a lifetim e
W hen states have attem pted to reform their
system s, trial law yers m obilise for a holy war
to defend the status quo. Texas, for exam ple,
passed sweeping reform s In 1988, m any o f
them aim ed at fim lting the m oney that goes
to lawyers. In a traditional partnership, labor
unions Joined the trial law yers In resisting
reform . T h ey concentrated th eir efforts on
Texas* 31-member Senate, which could block
any reform the Houee passed. The trial
law yers and labor unions were confident they
had a lock on that body o f Democrats.
Into the fray for an unforgettable moment
cam e Lonnie (Bo) Pilgrim , one o f those
d istin ctly T ex a s typ e o f characters. He
founded and build "P ilg rim 's p rid e " to
becom e the fifth la rg u l chicken processor In
the country. Television ads featured him In a
signature Pilgrim * haL carrying a pet chicken
w ith him . But when Pilgrim ■*»***-«* to the
capital tw o days before the Senate vote on the
" ----------- '— » ' com p bdl, he had m ore than

• 'm j:
■MM

*-»?•-.

--a. s-" • •
j? ;.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, December 28, 1992 - SA

Widower leaves fortune
to a teen-age waitress

Students
nearly h alf had dealt w ith pro- ;*
aaure to have sex.
It a ls o fo u n d m o re th an j
ceraed about contracting AIDS
than they had been a year ago,
w hile m ore than h alf worried
that their generation would (are
worae econom ically than their
parent!.
" I think I'll do aa w ell aa m y
p aren ta h a v e ." aald D erek
W estfall. " I don 't know if I'll do
any better than they have, but I

ported feelin g unsafe . A m o
m ales, S3 p e rc e n t report)
ow ning o r having access to
gun.
sated fo r the
provided it

able gloom am ong atudenta,
much to UhMy to be attributed to
the typical anxieties o f adntoa
cence com bined w ith the heavy
._

ik .

" (b a ll
worry ai
n ot tnv
activity,'

&lt;-K.it ■■

having
considered suicide; a percent
re p o rte d t r y i n g to c o m m it
suicide and 61 percent reported
knowing aomeone their age who

—One In seven girts reported
bein g sexu ally assaulted; 31

CH AG RIN F A L L S . O hio W idowed, childless and past 80;
B i l l C r u x t o n w a n t e d h is
$300,000 fortu n e*'to make a
difference In som eone's life. A
17-year-old waitress w ho had
been kind to him teem ed the
perfect choice.
When he died last month, he
left the bulk o f his estate to Cara
Wood, the-Kenaton H igh 8cbool
senior who befriended him dur­
ing the 13 months she worked
pert-tim e at Dink's Restaurant.
C o ra B ru ck , C r u x t o n 's
00-year-old slater and his only
livin g relative, has challenged
th e w ill, w h ic h d e s ig n a te d
enough m oney to pay for her
funeral. She says tt doesn't
represent his true intentions.
; 'M r. C r u x t o n 's l o n g t im e
friends all agree this was not the
same gu y," said Mark Fishman,
Mrs. Brack's attorney. "T h e BUI
Cruxton that they knew was a
v e ry c o n s e r v a tiv e and
down-to-earth guy. This is the
la st thing th ey w ou ld have
exp ected from th e tru e BUI
C raxton ."
But em ployees and patrons at
Dink's, a diner to this Cleveland
suburb, knew C raxton aa a
lonely man who appreciated the
attention be got from Mtoa Wood.
"C ara Is lust a good k id ." said
« la fOOwncK, co-owner
i*m nauwr rdt
Dennis
oi

the restaurant "S h e eras ju st a
typical Junior In high school, yet
she took the tim e to do things for

Bin."

Cruxton’s w ife o f 40 yean .
O erirade, died o f cancer to 1980.
Dink's, eating lunch and dinner
there every day. The em ployees
and customers becam e his faml*
ly. If he wss late for a meal. Cara
would call to make sure he was
OK.
"Y ou could tell when Bill came
in ." Cara said. "Y ou 'd hear him
■tinffUns down the hallwav. and

A previous w ill had named
another Dink’s waitress aa the
main beneficiary, but after she
left for another Job and lost
touch with Craxton, he drew up
a new one.
He made no attem pt to keep
the w ill secret, often talking
"abou t It w ith his friends at
Dink's. Zdoishek said everyone
th ere k n e w that C ru x to n 's
friendship with Cara waa Im­
portant to him, but waa atrlctly
that — friendship.
"It'a sad to think that people
would Im m ediately look at It
from a negative standpoint,"
Zdoishek said. "T h ey should be
able to accept It at face value.

that som ebody waa n ice

som ebody else."
A hearing on Mr*. Brack's
challenge In Cuyahoga County
Probate Court to scheduled for
February. She lives on Medicaid
In a nursing hom e and the
money "w ou ld assist her greatly
In l e a d i n g a c o m f o r t a b l e
lifestyle," Fishman aald.
Meanwhile. Cara la m aking
plans to go to college, regardless
o f whether she gets the m oney.
She wants to m ajor tn business.
."I waa working to pay for
college, but we weren’ t livin g out
o f a box or an yth ing," Cara aald.
" I still get an allowance from m y
m om ."

Mall

1A
Associates appeared before o
or the agreement lor commission workshop m eeting
study early last w eek. City and announced that 25 small
Manager Bill Simmons is not businesses had already ’ been
expecting any major changes signed for the mall, with the
e x p e c ta tio n o f 125 to 140
from the presentation.
At the present time. Simon sm aller .shops to be operating
and Associates, developers o f the when I he m all opens.
m all, have contracted with only
He estim ated that the grand
four m ajor tenants. J.C. Pen- opening could com e as soon as
neys. Parisian . Dillards and August. 1995.
Burdlnes. A Simon public rela­
Although the redevelopment
tions spokesperson had earlier agreem ent will be a separate
said that the financing or the matter from the regular* City
project could be accomplished Commission agenda. II 1s sched­
with four core stores, and that uled early In I he regular meet­
additional core stores could be ing. which wfll begin at 7 p.m.
sought at a later dale.
tonight, in the commission
E a r lie r th is m on th . T o m chambers o f the Sanford City
S c h n e i d e r o f S i m o n a n d Hall. 300 N. Park Avenue.

ENTRANCE *2
WELCOME TO FUN WORLD

STW .
t a ffy
ta d 3B PW K O I * K rtbed them selves aa sexually
a c tiv e . A m on g th e seau aH y
active. 43 percent reported hav*

B ta» m ta ta « ■
the president) 66 percent. Con*
gross; and 67 p ercen t, th e
media.

Zones

pdta n ta

_ * » .

S S
t o t S b l e r Z d o to te k !s a id . But
w henever Cara was working,
he'd make it a point to sit in her
•action.
- "H e knew that Cara’s dad had
d ied ." said M aggie North. 18. a
waitress at Dink's. "1 think he
felt like he was a father figure. I

that w ntaddm a the w volvlim
jail door syndroms."
'"Short of a complete eoopsra*
live enort a
m i. ween tne rnmmii
oonunu*
nlty.
the
prevention
and educa" S a l e o f d ru g s w i t h i n an
rstsh llsh rd drug-free sone la Uon specialists, law enforcement, judiciary, oorrectlona, and

know be bought her some gifts
and things. I think he was
kmdy."
tOQlbOV
.CftTft*
^ ft ■df-dCWlibCd
. .
whose greatest passion la playtag aoowr. quit tne restaurant tn
Septembur because of confUcta

SsmsSature/'^be wrote, "t£s drag

001 *be kept In touch with

a rre s te d an d c o n v lc ta d . In
th e o ry ," he added, "th e ag*
respon den ts) 73
f m mmm

■

s a il

■ 1

A m on g the m ost poignant
finding., Kn&gt;use said, waa a
strong Tear am ong even the
b r ig h te s t atuden ta ab ou t
"dow nw ard m ob ility."
Fifty-four percent said th ey
expected to have m ore difficu lty
than their parents to starting a
career, S f p ercen t exp ected
mare difficu lty tn buying • house

M ary Blanche B calrd. 69.
Lochm ond D rive. Fern Park,
died Saturday. Dec. 26. at Life
Care Center, Altam onte Springs.
Born S ep t 8. 1903. In Louisville.
Ky., she m oved to Centra) Flor­
ida In 1978. She was a house­
keeper for a bank and a member
o f Trin ity Tem ple United Meth­
odist Church.
Survivors Include daughter.
Irma Frailer. Fern Park: two
g ra n d s o n s a n d fo u r greatgrandchildren,
Baldwln-Falrctylfd Funeral
Home. Altam onte Springs, in
charge o f arrangem ents.
Christine Buckner, 80, o f 2000
Park C irc le, Leesb u rg, died
Thursday, D ec. 24. -in Haggerton. Md. Born April 4. 1942.
In Hampton. Va.. she moved lo
Leesburg In I9 60 from Sanford.
She was a hom em aker and a
Baptist.
S urvivors Include mother,
Annie Mac San tiago. M iam i:
•ons. V ictor. V in ce, both o f
Leesburg. W endell. Maryland:
daughters. V ick ie D ickinson,
Vonda. Vernette. all o f Sanford.
Vanya Perkins. W endy. WenUeUyn, all o f Leesburg. Vcretle.
Maryland: alatera. Carolyn. Mary
Jane. Betty, all o f Miami. Martha
J e n k ln a . S a n f o r d , S h i r l e y
Longmire. Philadelphia. Clara.
Bronx. N .Y.i brother*. Henry
Cherry, Miami. Douglas Cherry.

"W h at Is really needed Is truth
In ■■nlsnnlnU
sentencing,•* . km
he nnsitlmmil
continued.
"W h en drug dealers are arrested
and con victed,-th ey should be
sen te n ce d to a m e a n in g fu l
period and not released early, o r
not Incarcerated at all, due to
p ro b le m s w ith s en te n c in g
guidelines."
" I favor drug-free tones for
schools, churches and city beta*
tie s ." he w rote, "h u t If the
legislature la serious about the
drug problem, they should de-

In

Bradenton. WUlie Jam es Cherry.
Kansas; 42 grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren..
Sunrise Funeral Hom e, San­
ford. In charge o f arrangements.
HOW i a n s u m p
Howard Elrod. 63. o f LHIIan
Drive. Fem Park, died W ednes­
day, Dec. 23, at Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center. Born July
7. 1927, In McCracken County.
Ky.. he moved to Central Florida
In 1980. He waa a Ure builder for
Goodyear T ire Co. Mr, Elrod was
a m em ber o f Disabled Am erican
Veterans Chapter 30. Sanford.
Am erican Legion and the Loyal
Order o f Moose. H e was an Arm y
veteran.
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e w ife.
C laudle; daughter. C laudette
T o d d . J ack son . Mich.) son.
Lynn. Jackaon: mother. Halite
Elrod. Fern Park; brother, Paul.
Valrlcoi slaters. Anna
Thompson. Fern Park, Barbara
S an d ers, Or l a nd o: two
grandchllden.
B a ldw ln -F alrch tld Funeral
Home. Altam onte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.
Alexander O. Klein. Jr.. 77. o f
Senegal C ourt, O vied o, died
Friday. Dec. 28. a! W inter Park
Memorial Hospital. Born March
9. 1913. in W alltagton. N.J.. he
m oved to C en tra l. Florida In
1966. He waa a form er owner
and operator for a restaurant

tag. I f a concensus vote o f

lUDooft in nlveils ft m oiutkxi on

5 ^ 5 ^ c it r S c S k is
drafted snd presented for an*
proval at a subasouent regular
S eeU n ^
The worfcshoo is
to
begin this evening at 8 p m , In
the Cttv Manama's conference
mom. f h e r S u C m eeting w fll
follow at 7 p.m ., In fly* com*
mission cham bers o f the Sanford

nunen on wov# v* ni* c tu u
h° « ® '
6 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 In U .8 . T rea su ry
States. 645,000 worth o f jew elry,
tw o cam. 621.000 In cash and
daaovtsd other vatuablea.
accumulated hia wealth as
the ow ner o f a piano and organ
w hl^
^ the 1070k He waa active to
Republican politics In More lend

and bow ling alley. He waa a
Protestant and a m ember o f the
H arm ony Lodge 8 Free and
Accepted Masons, Royal Arch
Maaon Baldwin Chapter 17.
Survivors Include wife. Leona;
d au g h ter. A d rie n n e Reiner.
Flem m lngton. N .J.: brother.
Robert: tw o grandchllden and
one great-grandchild.
W oodlawn Funeral Home, Or­
lando, in charge o f arrange­
ments.

dcnce. Born June 29. 1906. in
SearamonL Maine, she m oved to
Central Florida in 1972. She was
a homem aker and a Baptist.
Survivors Include daughter.
M arilyn LeBoeuf. Maine; sons.
Richard and Clarence, both o f
Sanford. W alter. St. Augustine;
13 g r a n d c h i l d r e n a n d 16
great-grandchildren.
O ram kow F u n era l-H om e.
Sanford. In charge o f arrange­
ments.

KARSHT.FAMTLS

M A W V . WAD06LL

.

*,

1 *

K a rin T. P a n tle . 88. o f '
Tallw ood D rive. Deltona, died
Friday. Dec. 28. at W est Volusia
M em oria l H o sp ita l. D eLand.
Born Feb. 4, 1907. In Sweden,
she m oved to Centra) Florida to
1978. She waa a homemaker
and Lutheran.
Survivors Include son. Roy. St.
Augustine: daughters, Lorraine
Kovalcik, St. Augustine. Karen
Steele, Deltona. Jean Shanahan,
Kissimmee. V yola Roland. ProHeights, Ill.t seven alatera;
t h r e e b r o t h e r s ; 13 g r a n d ­
children. 25 great-grandchildren
a n d tw o g r e a t - g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Oaklawn Park Chapel,
Lake Mary, to charge o f arrangementa.

OLA BVBLYN RUMNKY
Ola Evelyn Rum nry. 66. o f 66
Rocfccovc Court. Sanford, died
Monday. Dec. 28. at her real-

Mavis V . W addell. 77. o f 242S
Yale Ave.. Sanford, died Mon­
day, Dec. 28. at Parklake Nurs­
ing Care Center. W inter Park.
Born Oct. 21. 1915, In Rhode
Island, she m oved to Central
Florida In 1979. She was a sales
representative for a cosm etic
comapny and a m em ber o f the
Ladies o f the Elks. Sanford.
Survivors include husband.'
Robert: son. Jonathan Lewis.
Miami.
O r a m k o w F u n e ra l H o m e .
Sanford, In charge o f arrange­
ments.

If You Art:
Moving Into or
Around Tht Area
Gating Minted
Having A Baby

Let your Wotoome Mtgon repteteniative
antwer your question* about the area and
pm ent you with free gtta.
HYou Uvt InOne Of These Areas, Pitas# Call
Sanford

Lake Marv

ItaH W SwUawJf
I AAAUAM lAji

Longwooa
Winter Spring*
Altamonte
C t i it lb t r r y

O vM o
H. «t 111! (Hal* Am ..

TwMtor. Ok . a. will to toW t a
at
Srttot
AM.8
“ tow
to----*
— Own*.
^ 1R^HlnMO ta
^
taw
WFw* miwK
PVfP^MRi
itowtoyHMwt MrwT* ,Un,r*1
*—#y
I Mrto Pm m «I Hmm . m UcMt Am ..
tantoS, M i a Inctoraa 1 arrufiwuHU.

to .

323*8269
321*6860
069*8612 or 774-1231
777-3370
330-4468
609-7074
608-3810

|

r
■

�8A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday. December 28, 1992

Lake Mary
IN BRIEF
Elders Affairs Commission sets meeting
The City of Lake Mary Killers Affairs Commission will be
holding lls monthly meeting nt IOO W. bake Mary Hlvcl.. City
Hall Chambers, on Jan. 7 al 10 a.m.
The special guest speaker will be Pam Sanders from Hospice
of Central Florida.
Hospice of Central Florida Is one of the oldest and most
experienced hospice in Florida. The organization Is known
most of all for the earing professionals and volunteers, bringing
hope and comfort Into the homes of those lacing life-limiting
illness.
The Klders Allalrs Commission welcomes the general public
to all Its meetings. W e wnnltl like to Invite all interested parties
who wish to interact with the commission and our guest
speaker.

Camera club monthly meetings
The Seminole Lake Mary Camera Club meets the second
Wednesday every month In Old Lake Mary City Hall. 158 N.
Country Club ltd. at 7:30 p in. For more information, call Graee
at 321 -4723 or Sel al 323-8691.

Club takes the lead
L.K.A.D.S to Success, a newly formed club to share business
connections, will meet 7:30 u.m. Wednesday at Pebble Creek
Apartments clubhouse. 780 Creekwuter Terrace. Lake Mary.
One of the focal points of the meeting Is to exchange business
cards. Only one member of a particular type of business or
profession is allowed to join.
For more Information, contact Marcia Kurtzc 046-0609.

Rotary meets early
Rotary Club of Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings. 8 to 9
a.m. at the Tlmacuan Country Club, on Rinehart Road. Contact
Paul Osborne, president, at 321-4704.

Lake Mary Optimists meet weekly
The Optimist Club of Lake Mary meets every Tuesday at 7 (H)
p.m.. at 105) K. Crystal Lake Avc. (corner of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors are welcome.

Woman’s Club to meet
Lake Mary W om an's Club meets the fourth Wednesday of
each month. Contact Sheila Sawyer at 321 -75)47.

Historical Commission gathers
The Lake Mary Historical Commission meets Mondays at Old
City Hall. Contact Mary W o lff at 321-5000 for more
Information.

Clogging group to have classes
Dixieland Cloggers hold classes from 7-8 p.m. each Monday
at the old Lake Mary fire station. First Street and W ilbur
Avenue.

Weight Watchers meet on Thursdays
A local chapter of Weight Watchers meets at the Lake Mary
Community Building every Thursday from 4:45 to 0:45 p.m.

I

Youth Center open on Friday nights
Every Friday night, the Lake Mary Community Building Is
transformed In a Youth Center from 7-11 p.m. Area youth are
welcome to participate In the fun.

Sunbelt Daylily Club to meet
Sunbelt Daylily Club meets the first Sunday of the month at
2 p.m through April at the Old City Hall. Highway 15A near
Lake Mary Boulevard, Lake Mary.
The club educates members on daylily growing through slide
Bhows, guest speakers and trips to daylily gardens. A May
flower show and plant sale Is planned. There ure no club dues.
Call 886-3196 for more information.

Let us know what’s going on
The Sanford Herald welcomes announcements about social
activities and club news for publication In the Lake Mary pages
each Monday. There Is no charge.
1. All items should be typed or written legibly and include
the name of a person who can be contacted and a daytime
phone number.
2. The deadline Is 11 a.ill. Thursday before publication.

Arnettes treat friends to holiday tour
An occasion to remember and
talk about lor ages was the
holiday celebration provided by
LAKE MARY
one of Heathrow's most charm­
HEATHROW
ing couples. Shannon and Glenn
Arnette.
The invitation was Incredibly
unusual. The front read "Join
SARABECCA
the Arnett's for a Christmas
ROSIER
Holiday — Reservations a must!
See reverse side for details.”
The front was surely In line
with most Invitations, but the
the named fund raiser recipient
reverse side is what was so, lor the monies raised at the
unusual and creative. It said
Holiday Fantasia.
"Journey into Christmas with
Dona Tannler presented the
selected friends as the Arnett's
Heathrow Wom en's Club with a
offer a tour to remember, spiced
cheek In the amount of $1,500
with the holiday llalr! A special
from Dave Brewer for "house
chartered party bus lias been
sitting" during the "Street of
ordered to deliver you. our
Dreams" In Alaqua. The club
guests, to points of Interest.''
was indeed pleased.
A c t u a lly th ere w e re tw o
Another wonderful highlight of
busses anil there were three
the festive occasion was the
Imartling areas starting at Bay
Lake Mary High School choir.
Hill anil then moving up to
The Odessy Choir transformed
W inter Park and on to the
into m a d rig a l sin gers. The
Shoppes of Heathrow.
young men and women made
From beginning to end. the
their own period costum es,
Arnette’s entertained the two
which were handmade for them
Inis loads with cocktails, goody
a ft e r r e s e a r c h in g the R e ­
snack bags and musical videos.
naissance period and providing
The first stop w as In St.
the seamstress with necessary
Augustine where we boarded a
Information and materials.
conch train and had caroling
The costumes were beautiful,
along the historical streets nl old
however the voices emanating
St. Augustine. Then, as It was
from the groups mouths were
quite chilly and all were cer­
nothing short ol heavenly.
tainly feeling Christmusy. all
The women were entranced as
were provided with an afternoon
they listened to a wonderful
toast. Key West style, at the
array of Christmas songs as well
famous Couch I louse.
as a variety ol other wonderfully
The group then boarded the
upbeat melodies.
busses and were transported to a
The director at Lake Mary
C h ris tm a s W o n d e rla n d , lor
High School Is Mrs. Nellsen, she
dinner and entertainment at the
accompanied the choir on the
Four Seasons In Flagler Beach,
piano.
owned by the Arnetle’s.
G u e s t s w ere r e I u r e d
"exhausted" to their starling
destinationsbv midnight.

H tra ld Photo by S atabteca S onar

Shannon and Glenn Arnette welcome their guests to the party bus.

‘Bridle Brats’ exchange gifts
The South Seminole 4-11 Club,
known as the "Bridle Brats"
held its holiday party and gilt
exch an ge at the Sprin gdale
Farm In Longwood. where the
club meets.
Each m em ber of the club
chose a name out of a hat at the
last meeting and were to buy a
gilt for tbc person and vice
versa. Parents were invited to
the celebration which included
b a rb e c u e d lint d o g s , barnburgers. chicken and covered
d ish es brought by parents,
members and the Canady family
who own and manage the farm.
Herald Photo by Sarabacca R oald

A holiday treat
The Heathrow W om en's Club
held Its business meeting and
holiday luncheon meeting at the
H eathrow C oun try C lu b re­
cently.
They began their program
with a candlelight Installation of
new mem bers. Each held a
candle and III it as the elub
president. Peggy Pyle. Installed
them. They were each pcsentcd
with a rose with baby's breath.
The Invited guest was Marlly
Grigsby from the Hacienda Girls
Ranch In Melbourne. Grigsby
was there to take back to tbc
girls, age 6 to 18. all the
wonderful gifts the members of
the club purchased for the resi­
d e n ts . w h o s e n a m e s w e re
chosen during (he lust meeting.
Members were provided with the
girl's name, size. age. desires,
favorite color and -rould choose
to buy an entire outfit or a toy or
whatever they wanted to do.
Hacienda Girls Hunch wus also

Lake Mary H igh School C hoir m adrigals presented a renaissance C hristm as.

New board members selected
nnis Courson. Put Calloway and

By NICK PFKIFAUF

Bi l l

Herald Staff Writer

Harkins,

who

were

n o m i n a t e d b y t h e L a ke
M ary/H eathrow C h a m b e r of
Commerce.
• Planning &amp; Zoning Board 3-ycar terms. Bob Foley, re­
appointed. James Custcllo, Jr.,
repluelng Bill Greene. Craig
Spearman named to fill the one
year left In the term of Lowry
Rockett, who resigned with Ills
election as Mayor of Lake Mary.
• Board of Adjustment - 3-year
terms. John Hauck and Mary
Wolff, both re-elected.
• Elderly Affairs Commission ■
3-ycar terms. John F. Baumbach
and Rev. A.F. Stevens, re­
elected. Carolyn Yates to replace
Cindy Brown.
• Historical Commission • 3year terms. Re-elected were Ettlc
Jane Keogh. Mary June Durvea.
Barbara Gormun. Harriett Boyd.
B e tty e D e d m a n und S h a r i
Brodle. One position, held by Pat
Neff, who had one year remain­
ing in her term, was not Imme­
diately filled.
• Local Planning Agency 3-ycar terms. Rev. Paul Hoycr
und Ty Dedman. re-appointed.
Sheila Sawyer named to replace
S t e p h e n T u n z c r . R ic h a r d

LAKE MARY The Lake
Mary City Commission recently
re-appointed or selected new
members for a number of boards
that provide various services to
the commission and city.
All of the boards have a
number of persons with terms
expiring at the end of this year.
A p p o 1n t m e u t s a n d r e ­
appointments are as follows:
• Business Advisory Board •
1-ycar term. Linda Teeter. Fran
Slcdzinskl and Terry Duffy, re•appointed. Christopher Curtin
appointed to fill the term held by
Craig Spcurniun. Also to be
Included on the board are De­

Schultz named to fill the re­
maining one year term of Gary
Brender, who has been elected
Lake Mary City Commissioner.
• Parks and Recreation • 3year terms. Ed Suggs. Jcttu
Woodall and Kathy Gehr. re­
appointed.
T h e b o a rd a p p o in t m e n t s
approved by the City C om ­
mission were for expired terms
only. Most of the boards have
additional members.

Bapirkaek Book Etckorngt

of Altamonte Springs

*NOWOPENat
SHOPPES OF LAKE MARY
(Corner ol Country Club Road &amp;
Lake Mary Boulevard)

For More Information, Call:

.

3 2 8 -7 7 7 4

EVERY DAY IS
BARGAIN DAY

(

p u r e ( ountrY

{■I MIGHTY DUCKS E
rootoo t *otoo J
r C O N S IS T IN G

I

A D U L T S

THE LAST OF iiio

'I

A

THE M OHICANS J ™

(AMAIN RON

0

Do

The property of Mr. and Mrs. James (Olivia) Cambless. 174 W.
Third St., Lake Mary, was chosen as the Yard of the Month by
the Lake Mary Garden Club

\ U NIs
v H jI

WO EXULT BHOWS

The students of
costumes

the choir researched

and helped

make their

f

a.13

Mr.
Baseball &gt;n b

PRANCERi^i □
c n #:J0
HERO
Garden of the Month

1: 153:19
8:19 7: t S

d

1: 4* 4:00
4:29 —
*19 El

D E R
E G E

CHRISTMAS DAY

�B

Sports

T ry in g to bounce b ack
Seminole girls, Oviedo boys head to tournaments

LOCALLY
JCC offering classes

By DEAN SMITH

MAITI.AND — I ’hildien's tennis and gym
liaslies classes will he nllered liegtntimg Soil
(lav, Jan d. ai i lie Jewish Com iniinii \ ( 'eniei nl
Central Florida. 8 5 1 \ Maul.mil Avenue

Horald Sports Writer

rennis lessons will lie av.nlahle in Hrglnuri
Advanced Hcginnrt. and l i e School i lasses
CtV llltl.islle lessons will hi nlleied Ini ehildren
t ve.us and nlilei Available classes include
l i e team W n i k o u l. S v iu h n n i/ e d liiiiilillug
ream, bcgmnci and advanced liegltim i skill
classes, and i l u r i leading
Registration lot these and nlliei ptngi.mts is
now available
I'm more inlntniallon m in
leiilslei. call t»ir&gt;-f»i*dd exl 7:5

AROUND THE STATE

SA NFO R D — While Die ma|nrily ol the
Seminole County high school basketball teams,
will hr taking Mils week oil lo rest before starting
I heir final assault lor a spot in Ihe stair
lomnament. the two best teams in the entnily a
year ago will attempt to regain some lost glory In
major lonrnamenls Mils week
II they accomplish that, they could possibly
gain some national recognition as well
Moth the Seminole High School girls and
Oviedo High School hoys teams will see arllon In
hit'll powered loot uaiiienls starting today.
The Seminole I hull School Uhls advanced lo
the rcglnnals Iasi year, opened the season ranked

No. 7 lu the Class dA sialr- poll anil won Its first
tour names, tmhidlug three In its own tourna­
ment against some good eompeMMon.
Mill the Tribe losl live ol Its next seven names
and. despile otilsiaiidlun plav limn ic ttiro 111n
starters Nikki W.ishlnnhui. Knv Kay Mullins..and
Tenlshla Eason. Itenan lo show Us voolh and lack
ol depth
II Seminole's Iasi name Is nny Indication,
however, the Fighting Semlnoles may he on Muir
way hack.
Analusl ihe Sea hr ee/e S.uuleralis on Dee 1H.
Seminole pounded the visilors 7H .511 with
Wnsluiint'iii pouring m dl and Kasim 2.5 to raise
Its record lo 7T&gt;
Seminole opens play inulnlu In llic I'olk
llolldav Classli al Lake (ilhson Hint* School In

Lakeland. The Tribe went d-l and finished lllili
In Ihe Imiruament last year, hut Mils year’s Held
lakes on a national flavor with Ihe addition ol two
of the top nlrls’ programs in the country — Slml
Valley. Calif, (which was ranked nationally Iasi
year) and Klverdale I Unit School (Term ).
Also entered are slate-ranked learns I’linla
(in rd n -C h a rlo lte . L ak ela n d , and Monllav
Melhlehein.
The locals open play against Mu- host learn
Irom Lake Glhson at 8:d0 p in. tonight. II they
win. they will return to the court al 10:30 a m
Tuesday to play the Hethlehem-Marlner vvlnnei
Other teams In the Tribe's bracket Include Dr.
lidlllps (the defending Class -IA slate ehampl
oiisi. Winter Haven and Klverdale. Tn.

See Basketball. Page 2B

’Noles hope
tournam ent
will turn
luck around

DOUBLE TAKES

USC romps over Miami
WKSI PA I M HKAt'll - Dwnvnr ll.irkril Im
sr\r|| 3 pointers .111(1 llf«l Ills I.Ill'll lllgll \\1111
2d points iii lead ilu I T111v«*r*sii\ &lt;&gt;l Siiiiilniu
l .llllllllll.l III .III Hli (ili Vli till \ met Ml.Illll
S i i i i i I. iv niglll
11 w.is i In i'rn|nus |ti 21 Imirili si 1 . 1 mhi \ ii ini v
Miami lalls in 2 5
I ’ llll l i l l l l l l

snirnl

Hi |inlllls

llli 11H1111U •»»&gt;*•

.Dpnmtcts Kmliii'V Clialiiian mail In &lt;1 Ins i .i
n ri high witli Hi
Kill tlit* I IlirrliMIH's S lrv r till VV.11i|s SI III III Ili
|iomts .mil hail a sr.isnit high III ii'liiiimils
111 vin lint inn aildi'il I r»

By TONY DeSORMIER
Herald Sports Editor
SANFOR D
While ii m.iv uni hi
llic mi'Hlill! nl ilinlir .minim llinsl
rn,ii lies &lt; mins Mi ilmn is Imping
lll.lt pi avmg in a 1nmti.mictii Mill
III Ip IIIs Sc 111 IIII1ll lllgll Si lliml Im
sill I'l l ic.iiii i ml ils i \\m \cat w mli
sin ,ik
lilsl carl nl New Kills mi lie
Mini k n II bl­ new l.u is nu Me
block." inked Merllliu
Wi II b.

AROUND THE NATION]

iv s

Dolphins rally in OT
|1&gt;XIU&gt;K(D M a ss
W i n n i In Miami
Dolphins an- riiuuiug mil nl linn iln \ n mil
necessarily mil nl hope \nl with Dan Maiiini
anil Pete Stovannvii’ll In pull nil I hill riim rll
I line lirrnii s
Mai inn dm i led Miami In the I vtng tom Itilnwn
with 2:53 leli ill I lit* Inin III qttoiiri anil the
winning In Id goal H 17 lulu n\ i i i i i i i i ' Anil Ini
ihe set nml sii.nuhi week. Siny.mnvieh was
peril'l l nil Ihe derisive kick
Ills d5-y.inlri Ins ilnril hi hi goal nl ihe name
l apped a i ninehai k Itnin a Id l lialllime delieil
and nave the Dolphins a Hi Id w in S i i i i i I.iv nvei
ihe New England Patriots |2 III
Miami 11 I T&gt;| vvlileh had already ehneheil ai
leasi a wild card spot, won Ihe division S i i i i i I.iv
night w hen the Mull.do Mills Insi in the I Illusion
Oilers 27 3 Isee related slnrvl IDs Miami's lilsl
division Mile since I9H5.

pi. I V111Ll SI it III m u

Bucs pass by Cardinals
TKMPK. An/
— Vlnny i'esiaverile. i.ikmu
over alter the Phoenix delense slopped Tampa
Hav's minimi’ name, passed 2d v.nds in Maik
Carrier In (lie second ipiarier lor what proved in
lie ihe winning score in a 7-d vliiory Similav
The Mnccancers. who opened the season by
heal ini’ llic Cardinals 23-7. Ilmshed 5 1 I wink
snapping a live-game losing streak
Teslaverde eompleleil 21 ill I I passes lor 2dd
v.nds keeping drives alive aliei mim ing plavs
were slopped Phoenix held I lie lilies lo d I voids
rushing. giving up I I yards in I I carries m
KctiUlc * nhh
ll was |||e second 7-d loss ol I lie season lot Ihe
Cardinals. 112 lor Ihe second straight vein and
Id-35 In three years under coach Joe Bugrl
Phoenix owner Mill Midwill has said lie will
evaluate the team's progress an d decide next
month whclhci changes arc needed.

WHAT’S HAPPENING
Boys’ Basketball
Arby's Classic, Bristol, Tenn.:
Franklin South (Tenn.), 8:30 p.m

Oviedo

vs

Girls’ Basketball
Polk Holiday Classic, Lakeland-Lake Gibson
High School: Seminole vs. Lake Gibson. 8 30
pm.

Boys’ Soccer

Girls’ Soccer
Central Florida Classic: Lake Howoll vs
Stuart Martin County at Kissimmee Osceola High
School, 11 a in

FO O TIlA LL
SI. Del roll

C o m p le te lis tin g s on P a g e 2 B

M il V

Home for the holidays
Most Semmolo County high school varsity basketball
loams will bo idle this week Richard Roche (No 25
left) and Ins Lake Mary teammates will return to

action on Wednesday. Jan 6 at Mainland Deon
Daniels (No 32l and Seminole Arrow Force One also
play again on Jan 6 at Daytona Beach Seabreeze

O ile rs h a n d D o lp h in s A F C E ast title
By STEVEN WINE
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI — The Miami Dolphins' reward for winning
the AFC Kasl will hi’ their firsl week oil since
September.
Coach Don Simla's team earned Its first division title
slnee l()Hf&gt; Sunday night when orchrlval Muffalo lost to
the Houston Oilers. 27-d.
The Hills loss, enmbtued with Miami's 16-13
overtime vlelory at New England earlier Sunday, means
the Dolphins (11-5) have a flrsl-roiuid bye In the
playoffs and will play at home In the AFC semifinals.
"ll feels pretty good." tackle Jeff Dcllcnbach said as
he watched the final minutes of the Hills' game.
"Having a week off Is going to do the leant a lot of good.
Al this point everybody has a lot of humps and bruises.

l ids will give everybody a chance to heal up."
II San Diego heats Kansas City next week, the
Dolphins will play host to the Chargers the weekend of
Jan. 9-10. II San Diego loses. Miami will face Ihe
I louslou-MulTalo winner at Joe Hobble Stadium.
"W e said from the beginning that one ol our goals
was to win Mie AFC East and the home-field edge that
comes with ll." coach Don Simla said in a statement.
"N o w that we've done that, we have to look forward to
our next goal, which Is in play well every week of the
playoffs. ... I am proud ol our team winning the AFC
East Mile."
Miami made the playoffs lor jusi the second time In
seven seasons despite an ollense (hat sputtered In the
final six games.
"Obviously we've been struggling." Dcilenbuch said.
"M aybe tills will give us a little time to sit hac k, lake a
look al things and get hack on the right track."

Scinlllnlc will tipcii pi.iv iii Mn
Central rinml.i ( ll.lllrugr .11 I p ill
Mils ultrruiinu ,iLl.niist Stu.irt Smiih
lurk .it Sllvt-r Spurs Si.ulmm in
Kisslmmri- A win windil adv ,iu&lt; •
i h r T r ib e in ilu- ipi.u i i i I in.Ms
.ii&gt;.mist the w inn er nl Mu l..m
ti.llltl New I’nrl Kieliey (illll i ‘ ill’ si
III other llrsl inimd guttles lnil.iv
T a l l o h a s s e r - L l m nln p la y s Vi'in
Mr.n il. Melhnurni' lakes mi U inn i
H a v e n . Orl.iniln ( v p u s s ( ' i n k
ehallennes Sltiart-Marim ( nimiv
Flaglrr-Palni ('nasi hues Kissim
Hire-Gateway. Kissimmee &lt;&gt;si • n|,i
I.mules with St CI iiiii I .mil S.ili llili
I i . l i l i e s Ko rt W a 11n ii Meat h
( hnelavv hall lice
I have nu idea nl vvluil in
e x p e e l . " s a i d M e r llliu nl Ilu
umruaiuenl
’'They say IDs urn
supposed In he as i n in pet ll iv e as tin
l'l//a Hill luvitallnii.il bill Iasi vi ai
Davlnna lleaeh-Seahree/e was m
llic Imirnameut and didn't win Mu
championship. And Seahree/e went
nu lo win the C la s s dA stale
championship."
Seminole will he al relatively lull
strength While everyone on the
roster Is heullhv. three pl.ivcis
lliieludlng iwo starters) are mil nl
low n lor the holidays.
The tournament follows an otld
Inrtuol m ill.n the Mi learns an
divided Into loin seel unis and ale
seeded w it Inn their seel Ions. De
spile Mien wlnless leeoiil. the Sem
Inoles are ihe lop seeds In Ihe N'mili
S e e l l o n a h e a d ol K i s s i m m e e
Osceola, F la g lr r P a lm Coast and
Orlnndo-Cy press ( 'reek.
Ollier seelloil No. I seeds Im lode

See Soccer, Page 2B

Tribe cagers become ‘Arrow Force One’

*

Central Florida Challenge: Seminole vs
Stuart South Fork at Silver Spurs Stadium. 1 p.m
Pizza Hut Invitational: al Bishop Moore High
School &amp; Boone vs. Lake Brantley, 11 a m.; Lake
Howell vs Tampa-Chamberlain. 1 p m ; Evans vs.
Tampa Leto, 3 p.m.; Lyman vs. Bishop Moore. 5
p m ; at Edgewaler High School &amp; Dr Phillips
vs Lake Mary, noon; Oviedo vs. Coconut Creek.
2 p m : W in te r Park vs. D a y to n a Beach
Seabreeze. 4 p.m.; Edgewaler vs Clearwater
Central Catholic, 6 p.m.

M I1m
WFTV
I lain is. o M*eis |l.|

h r s i l i r s L. l ki

.111(1 L y i l l i l U ll S ,| i l l . till I I n p i . IV
ni i l s l i l i ' nl llli i ni di i r l l i •' si hi dl l l i
I m ,i i l i . m g r "

l.lons al

Sail

A rose by any other name?
The Seminole High School hoys'
basketball leant, whic h was once
known as the Celery Feds (short for
Federals) and. most recently, the
Fighting Semlnoles. has assumed
the additional monicker "A rrow
Forc e One."
Under the- guidance of lirsl-year
coach Mob Traina. the Seminole
cagers have assum ed this new
identity, a wicked twist on Air Forc e
One (the Air Force craft designated
for use by the President of the
United Stales) and the school's
Indian "lineage."
"W e (tlu- team and coaching staff)
put our heads together and came up
with It.", explained Traina. "W e
wanted something a little different,
something to ehararterl/e what
we're trying to do in way of defense
and tempo.
"Because we're trying lo apply
defensive pressure and pick up the
tempo, we wanted something that
would combine' the school's Semi­
nole mascot, speed, and things like

that."
"Air Force" was one of (lie llrst
suggestions Imi. as T ratlin said, it
didn't sound very Seminole like.
From there, ll was only a short leap

SPORTS

TONY
DeSORMlEH

to "A rrow Force." then lo "Arrow
Force One."
Traina. who gulclccl Ills team at
Stuart Martin County High School
tn developing a similar personality
and attitude (Tiger Trax). said Mint
the additional nickname (nines
complete with logo and motto.
“ We've taken the Idea ol the
Miami Heat logo In basketball lu
Haines coming through a hoop) and
added an arrow coming through the
liall." Traina said. "A n d wc have a
saving to go with that Play cpdek.
play hard, play smart."
It may sound like a gimmick, hut
Traina Is convinced In the larltc's
effectiveness
"W e're trying to get the Idea
across to the kids that we re looking

lor spurts lu a game where we take
over for a while.” explained Traina.
"You go on a six or eight-point run.
The game settles down for a few
minutes, then you go cm another six
or eight-point tear. That's what
wins games.
"IDs taken some time, but the
kids are starting to get the Idea."
Traina candidly pointed out that
Mie style of basketball he expects
the Semlnoles — excuse me. Arrow
Force One — to play is a demanding
one. requiring physical and mental
stamina to constantly apply pre­
ssure lor 32 minutes and seize every
opportunity.

"W e wanted something catchy,
something the kids could take pride
In. The Fighting Seminole Is the
school mascot, hut that's not quite
the Image you want to portray on
the basketball court. Running Sem ­
lnoles or Shooting Semlnoles would
he more accurate for a basketball
team."

While Arrow Forte One Is Just an
lu icresitu g nicknam e tor now.
Traina fully expects ii to become a
pointedly descriptive lone good pun
deserves .mnthcil pcisonlflcatlon of
what opponents can expect when
they lace Seminole High School on
the basketball court
Wc got the idea at Stuart-Martln
County from the University of
Houston basketball team, which
w as tai l i ng itscll Phi Slam m a
lamina al the tunc." Traina said
It wotked so well lor us at Martin
( i niii l v . so wc dec lilcd to do It here.

"A s we start to Improve, more
and more questions will be asked
about Arrow Force One.” said
Traina. "People around the state
always get us confused with Semi­
nole High School on the west coast
(In Pinellas County).

Assuming the Seminole eagers
reach the level of state competi­
tiveness that Traina has In mind.
Arrow Force One could take on the
same slate-wide acceptance that
"the Long Ked R ow " of Tatnpa-Lelo
High School has In cross country.

"Hut now when they hear tt.
there'll be no confusion. When we
start talking about 'Arrow Force
Onc.' they'll know that's SunlordScmlnolc. We have to hr playing
well for It to mean something, hut
we have to start some time."

�Or

iwtiWiwiWaHBeHtiBBHH

8anford Herald, Sanford, Florid* - Monday, December 28, IMS

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
Phaoni*
* Mlnnowta
Ocean Bay
Ovtralt
Tom aotoy
Chicago

AM Tim at 1ST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AWeottc PtilNon

i San Frandtco
y HawOrtoana
Atlanta
LA Roma

4 it 0 .MO 141 J »
Control
11 • 0 .4*0 » 4 14*
1
7 0 w m m
5 W 0 1 M 147 100
a 11 o 4 M M 1 0 M
I It o 411101141
dtaM
11 1 0 447 M7 M0
It
a 0 .714 M l M l
4 to 0 474117 414
o .i v *
•» * m »

Philadelphia

A —14.714.
Flrs'downt
Ru*ho*yord»
P an in*
RotamYorda
COWaAWIlH
Sackad Yard! Loit
Punt*
Fumbtal Loot
P*nattlaa-Var«t

• **

M l*
SI
30-114 44
t it
S
H IM
M
11

117
11

an

TlmtotPoam»*on

Ml
17
177
io»
*
l*
1U

* .»
11

4-41

34:10 M :»

Miami

Wathington

Lo* Angato*Ratdar»ll, WadtlngtonlO

Chicago

Indiana
Atlanta
M ilw aukee

Tap I t Pared, Week
How Nw tag 14 taam t to Tka Atm * la tad
f r a il wttaQtkataitaaMpaMtarodtatawooki
1. Duka (7-0) bool DePaul 0071; koal L IU
*447, boat Erlgham Young 0*441. Kantat (oai boat North CaratIna Slota
04441 boot Jackaan Slat a *1*1.
i. Kentucky (40) boat Miami, Ohio 4040.
4. Indian* t t t l ) beat St. John1* 144*0: boat
But t*f *0-40.
4. North Carolina (7*1 baat Ohio stota
04*4.
4. OMchlfan (411 boot Control Michigan
*44*.
4. Satan Hall (M l baat ABNahl gt-l*.
0. Iowa (0 *) boat Eaitem Michigan 10144;
baat tovtham II llnoli *0-70.
*. Oklahoma (7-1) lott to Erlgham Young

Phoenl*
Saattlo
Portland
LA Lokort
LA Clipper*
Goidan Slat#
Sacramento

Atlanta 111, M im e iota i*s
Goidan Stoto U N D aito ***

Hlggt *11. Marin* 11. Now England.

la aday1*8 *m *t
PltNburgh IS, Ctovotond 11
Kama*City tl.O anvarlO
M lnne*otalT,O ro*na*y7
Indtanayalia I I . Cincinnati 17
Miami 1*,N*w England II.O T
Philadelphia 10. Maw York Giant* 10

C h a rlo tt*
Cleveland
O f tro ll

Loctnood » ] H . Stephan* 044. Carlaan o il,
O a a A ll.M tM u rtrr I t . VaugAnl*.
P A W N * - M iam i, M arin* 11-M-M17.
M r* England, Carlaan 1 1 1* it*. MeMurtry
0 1O*.
R E C E IV IN * - Miam i, Humphrey 711,
Oup*r a x . Clayton 1««. Jack ten i d , Paige

■

Hou*tan00, banmr a*
Mllwaukoo HI. How York 100. OT
Pttowii* i l l Saattlo IN
Portland lit, PhWodotphlo 111OT
SonAntenMIOa LA LoMr* ft
Phoonlt II*. Oonu5rO^*T^*.
Philadelphia 1M. LA CttgaorS 110
Sacramanto 111, laaton W
CharlottoatNmrMhktvTlOprn
Atlanta al Waihmglan, ItM p.m.
MHwauba*at OHMta, It M p.m.
LA Lakarta* Wtoni, liMgjg.
Detroit at Clavoland. 7:10p.m.
Goidan Stateat SanAntonia, 0:Mj
Minnatota at Utah, 0p.m.

okla n d o ( taa t
Scott 414 M la. Totbart 4 7 4117. CTNoai
4 1 1 4 * 10. Andaman 4 to M IX Sfclloo 410 41
17. Kilo 1 1 0 *1 . R g yo lt-t 4 * 0 . Tumor S * 11
7. Karr 1-1411, Oroon 41 f t I . Totota: 1470
117*100.
MIAMI (HO)

Toronto at How York li

M

| ^ T M IM 1

H72m r,H 4 O il* 4 (mm

Lo flo l H o M c o
O tE ttm itM iU
•We don’t know much about
them (Lake O lbaonl." m ld head
coach John McNamara, " fe ll aa
o f a couple o f w eek* ago. I don’ t
think they had w on a gam e."
y V

. B u t McNamara I*
n o O i^ fc w g m n te * ^

iaktng
-

mat of ' the NN
We're attll a very youtMd tai

took-off the

ajsaAsug!
have a way* to go .”
M cNam ara alaoatMd

the other wa* a loaa to top*
ranked Miami Senior In Miami.
Oviedo la one of only two team*
to atay wtthia SO point* of the

S 5ggdU

ii

it

AN flNnuaratAL suaoivi
RMunTAs iavia
jK f

M M dt

uaedto varaity baaketbajL the
team' haa struggled lately,

local pmn#C: Franklin South
(Term.) at ■ ; » p.m.

^

'uMAN.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, December

28, 1882 -

SB

Pruning sensitive plants

IN B R I E F
Al'Anon group gathers
Serenity Won, an Al-Anon group for friends and fam ily or
alcoholics, will m eet each Monday. Tuesday and Thursday
night at 8 p.m. at the Sahara Club, 3087 S. Sanford A v e „
Sanford. Call Flora at 340-5078 for more Information.

Narcotics Anonymous masts In Sanford
Narcotics Anonymous m eets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
o f Goodwill. 317 Oak A v e „ Sanford.

Help for gamblers offered
Gam blers Anonym ous and Oam-Anon for fam ily and friends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p.m.. Church o f the Good 8hepherd, 3 $ l Lake Ave., Maitland.
For m ore Information, call 336-0208.

Cancer support group meets
Support. Hope and Recovery. 8.H.A.R., m eets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p.m. at Central Florida Regional Hospital In the
far com er o f the dining room. This Is a s elf help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatm ent now or finished
with It. Call 324*8737 or 322-7780 for m ore inform ation.

Help for child support enforcement
Association for Children for Enforcement o f S upport ACES,
will meet the second and fourth Monday o f each month, 7 p.m,
at the Sem inole County Library, Casselberry branch. 8.R. 436
and Oxford Road. Meetings are free. Call 263*0838 for more
Information.

Tosstmssters meet et 8CC
Sem inole Community College (8CC) Toastm asters Club
*8581 w ill meet every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.. at Sem inole
Community College. Contact Rosetta Bonham at 323*8284 for
m ore Information

Don’t be too hasty to prune out cold-damaged areas
Hibiscus, allamanda, polnsettla. citrus,
Ixora and thryallls are a few exam ples o f
cold sensitive plants. If these sensitive
plants are damaged by freezing tem pera­
tures, this winter, don't be too hasty to
prune out the dead areas. The degree o f cold
dam age In many Instances cannot be
determ ined until growth begins In spring.
By pruning before all danger o f frost has
past you m ay rem ove wood that.pould give
protection from future freezes. The (read
leaves and stems can afford som e protection
to the undamaged parts o f the plant. If
pruned, later freezes m ay do m ore damage
than what would have been done If the dead
parts were left on the plant. If you do prune
now , co ver th e plant during free zin g
weather to protect It. Even If the entire top
o f the plant is killed back by a freeze. It m ay
send up new shoots next spring. W alt until
warm weather arrives after the plant has an
opportunity for regrowth before glvlng-up
totally.
Frozen banana stalks and bird o f paradise
stems m ay be rem oved as soon as you can
determ ine how much la dead. Banana stalks
become brown and soft when frozen. New
shoots w ill appear from the ground next
spring. W ith the bird o f paradise there Is no
true stem, only leaf stalks. These w ill turn
brawn soon alter freezing. You m ay rem ove
them or leave them on to protect the root
system until spring. It Is very doubtful that
a bird o f paradise that was killed back to the

be grafted again or else you w ill only get
small, poor quality fruit from the rootstock.
In other words. If your citrus Is killed back
to the ground It w ill probably not produce
the kind o f fruit that It used to produce.
Freeze dam age to azaleas usually affects
the flow er buds and stems. I f the flow er
buds are damaged the plant w ill usually
produce little or no flowers. Stem dam age
appears as dieback or death o f branches In
late spring or early summer. Dead azalea
branches should be pruned out as they
•occur.
Camellia dam age is probably confined to
flow er buds and leaf burn. Cold damaged
flow er buds w ill either drop from the plant
or only partially open with a brown center.
Leaf damage on cam ellias w ill not be long
lasting. As new leaves com e out In the
spring, the old damaged ones w ill drop from
the plant.
The

ground w ill flow er next spring or summer.
Following a freeze. It generally takes from
12 to 15 months for the plants to flow er
again.
Freeze damage to citrus Is not easy to
determ ine since damage to the trunk m ay
not show up for several months. Citrus trees
should be pruned as soon as possible after
the extent o f the dam age Is determ ined. As a
rule o f thumb, you w ill know where the
dam age has occurred after the second flush
o f grow th follow ing the freeze. Branches
that fall to produce new grow th should be
rem oved.
It often takes this long for freeze damage
to the trunk to show up In the growth o f the
plant. In citrus. It is possible to have lim ited
dam age to the foliage and severe dam age to
the trunk. Rem em ber, too. that m ost citrus
is grafted and If the tree Is killed back below
the graft union, the new shoots w ill need to

you can during o d d weather. From
landscape standpoint It Is better to m ix the
hardy and tropical or tender plants so that
the loss o f a few tropica] ones w ill not
destroy the effect o f the entire landscape
when losses occur. If you are Interested In
p la n tin g o n ly h a rd y p la n ts In yo u r
landscaping, there are selection guides
available at the Agriculture Center to help
you choose the best plant for your location.

Kiwsnls Club of Cssselberry meets

Weekly Lions Club meeting
The Sanford Lions Club m eets every Tuesday at noon at the
Am erican Legion on South Sanford Avenue. For information,
call 321-0700.

Grandmotherly love
G randm other's C lub e n te r­
tained Juveniles in the Semi­
nole County Juvenile Detention
Center at a Christmas party.
According to Mary Smith, club
president, "Our purpose is to
prove to them as grandmothers
we love them." Shown with
Smith (right) In photo are club
members Edythe Wright (left)
and Allien Gibson.

5 4-H members attend
roundup in Louisville

The follow ing births have been
recorded at Florida Hospital,
Altam onte S prin gs
Nov. 20 — Daria and Nelson
Madrugs. Oviedo, boy
Nov. 30 — R ita and Tim othy
L a u g h t ln , W i n t e r S p r in g s !
Felicia and Louis Flores, A lta­
m onte Springs, girl
Dec. 2 — Sara and John
Bertram. Sanford, girl: Rufina
and Jam es Lee Jr.. Altam onte
Springs, boy
Dec. 3 — Nancy and Dennis

C oekerh am . Lon gw ood . b oy:
Jennifer
ry*t*"‘H Fitzgerald,
Altam onte Springs, boy: b on n e
■m i M ichael Holder, Altam onte
Springs, boy
Dec. 8 — Yvette and Steven
Alvarado, W inter Springs, girt
Dec. 6 — M aria and Juan
Qabtola. Fern Park, girl
Dee. 6 — Suzanne apd Donald
Scbapker, W inter S p rin g* girt
Dec. 7 — Donna and
Bhuroway, Altam onte
boy

Chicks’ and chickens’ anatomy different
D B A R A B B Y : Please help set­
tle an argument 1 recently had
w ith a friend.
W e were in a chicken restau­
rant
i t t in g chicken anato­
m y after I bad ordered a breast
o f chicken and was served h alf o f
a chicken breaat. Abby, doee a
py o h s o have a singular breaat
o r tw o breaeta? S o u r , w e have
m nenllcd vets, t r fence teachers
and butchers'In several g rocery
atone: nobody aeems to know.
I aay a chicken has on ly one
breast, not tw o — on ly tw o
halves. I would appreciate any
help you can give m e on thle

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

D R A B DBCKi O ver the years, I
have dealt with problem s in*
vo lvln g "c h ic k s ," hen-pecked
husbands, dumb clucks, snd all
m anner o f "fo w l" play: however,
at the risk o f laying an egg. 1*11
try to answer your question.
Unlike humane, cfaldtena do
not have tw o breasts. In the
c h e s t a rea , t h e y h a v e one
"b rea st," which la divided by
bone and cartilage.
M A S A B B Y i Please remind
nurses and other health care
professionals that a person's
w eight Is a personal and private
m atter.
T h e scales In m y doctor's
office are right beside the recep­
tionist's desk, and only a few
from the

eigh t people In the watting room
tonear.
Abby, I am not ashamed o f m y
weight, but It doesn't have to be
a m atter o f public record. In*
c l d e n t a l l y . th e n u rs e w h o
b lu rted ou t m y w eigh t was
plenty large enough to assure
m e that she would not care to
have her w eight announced.
Later, In the privacy o f the
exam ination roam , this same
nurse was struck mute when I
asked her what m y blood pre­
ssure was. I guess that inform a­
tion would require a security
clearance from the governm ent,
but a patient's w eight can be
shouted to the multitudes.
This m ay seem like a small
m tU ff com pared to io n ic o f the
problem * you h ew about* but In
this w eight-conscious, eatingthat a little
In order. '

ry-r -

I thought 1was the only person
who felt this way. until others —
men as w ell as women — began
voicing the same sentiments.
Abby, people don't need another
reason to avoid going to their
doctors, and this practice o f
weighing In and loudly announc­
ing the results to one o f the
r e a s o n s p e o p le d r e a d this
checkup. I fin a lly told that
nurse. "W rite It down snd show
It to the if ta sk !"
IT P R IV A T E ,

Eaton o f Prescott. Arts.,
donated 33 gallons o f blood.
A b b y. our form er senator.
Barry Ootdwater m ay have do­
nated m ore than 33 gallons, but
his name to no lon jp r tat the
United Blood services com puter
because he hasn't donated for a
few years.
Please try to find out who
holds the record for blood dona­
tions. It m ight help to recruit
new donors. W e need them.

JAY!
IT P R IV A T E ! I'll
bet this letter w ill be tacked up
on a few bulletin boards. Thanks
for w riting.

J A V t Great ideal 1Just
heard from Bruce button o f St.
Petersburg, Fla., sayin g that
W allace D. Edlngton baa do­
nated 34 g s ti«— and 2 pinto o f
D E A R A B B Y : On Nov. 3, M ood — and he'a still
Hugh rnedm an o f pum c * n anyone top th it?
Spring*, Calif.. nlf1 tluUt IvtUtofi
Saylan, also o f Palm S p rin g*
donated 18 gallons o f blood to
top D avid Rubin, o f Staten
Island, N.Y., who had lust re*
ceived his One Oalion Club pin.
Ms. C arole S telert, U nited
B lood S ervic es em p loyee In
Scottsdale, told m e that C liff

C O N S E N T IN G
a

d

u

l

i

c.

Klwanis Club o f Casselberry m eets every Tuesday at 7:30 a.m.,
at Village Inn. com er Dog Track Road and US Highway 17-02
in Longwood. For Information, call 831-8040.

m onte Springs: K elli
Five Sem inole County 4-H
W i n t e rr Park
Park a
i nd J e n n ifer
members represented Florida at
Spencer, 8orrento. The team
the Eastern National 4-H Horae
was coached b y Debbie Biechele,
R o u n d u p In N o v e m b e r In
a form er Sem inole County 4*H'er
Lou isville, Ky. T h e Roundup
which Is part o f the N orth
who Is a student at Barry College
Am erican, International L iv e ­ in Georgia.
Thf -U- * *
f &gt;■
"
stock Exposition, prates
enrolled in 4-H p relect
f&gt;f*x T h e E astern N ation al 4-H
opportunity to demgiasj rMi
knowledge o f equm Ffelkted sul
Ject m atter In a national com pet­ tton al L iv es to c k E xp osition ,
itive setting. The event Includes S tate C o o p era tive E xten sion
H orse B ow l, Horse Ju dgin g,
Service. USOA and National 441
Public Speaking, individual and
Council, a not-for-profit educa­
team demonstrations, and Hip- tional organization
uses
pology contests.
to help
Representing Florida at the
and strengthen the 4-H program
N ational Horse Bowl contest A ll program s are offered wtthout
were: J ill Huff, W inter Springs: regard to
Kim and Carrie Nugent. Alta* or national origin

s

t

s

rk-

£

�; J
.’kjl
I(gup tVv ’v i « **w
i,T&amp; v-:

Sanford Harald, 8anford. Florida - Monday, Ddcambar 28, 1BS2

Legal Noticet

Legal Notices

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

ANTHONY

Orlando - Winter F
8 3 1 -9 9 0 3

RO RIRT

noon louiz.M iM nf.

CUOMDIATUNOAY
A SUNDAY

__
Datendant(i).
N O TIC IO F
F O R IC L O tU R IIA L I
R YC LIR K O F

N0W ACCOTNQ

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cause the defective bone tissue orthopedic surgeon Is on the
to calcify, thereby restoring Its right track. However, once the
normal strength. (This Is one diagnosis o f Paget’s disease la
reason that these drugs are now established. I believe you should
being used to treat osteoporosis, be under the care o f an en­
a bone disease marked by loss o f d o c r l n o l o g l s t . b e c a u s e the
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E i t h e r by c h o i c e or
circumstance you may undergo
a change o f attitude In the year
ahead. Your altered personality
will make you stronger and more
positive.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You arc very perceptive
today and It shouldn't be too
difficult for you to know when
someone Is not telling the truth.
However, you would be wise to
keep your perceptions to your__
_
_
self. Know where to look for things today Is better than your
romance and you 'll find It.
contem poraries' m ethods, for
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19) harm ony's sake, let everyone
Today you might be a bit more have some sort o f Input,
generous than usual In your
CANCER (June 31-July 23)
business dealings. This could be This could be one o f those days
either good or bad. depending where you might create proupon how far you go In your blems for yourself In areas where
giving ways.
there are no reasons for proPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) blems lo exist. Don't rock the
S i t u a t i o n s y o u p e r s o n a l l y boat.
__
manage or direct could have
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
belter chances for success today helpful to friends today, but try
than those where you are under hot lo become too Immersed In
the direction o f another. Do your ‘ heir problems. G etting in too far
own thing.
could cause a loss o f objectivity.

By Phillip Aider

ace. Sxwarc drew trumps in
three rounds. Then he cashed
the diamond king. When East
' discarded, the hand had counted
out. Taking East's pre-emptive
opening .bid Into account, de­
clarer knew W est had started
with 1-2-7-3 distribution and
East with 7-3-0-3. It looked as
though Sxwarc had to guess
which opponent was holding the
club queen. If It was W est.
Sxwarc could take the finesse. If
It was East, he could be stripsqueexed In the black suits.
Yet Sxwarc found a play that
avoided the guess. He led a club
to dummy's king and cashed the
leads the spade seven: six. Jack, club ace; discarding his diamond
ace. How do you continue?
ace. Next, he ruffed a club,
South was Henri Sxwarc. a which brought down the queen.
great French player who won the Finally, declarer led his last
W orld Team Olympiad in 1986 diamond toward dum m y's Jack.
and the European Champion­ West had to let Sxwarc Into the
ship three times.
dummy to cash a couple o f clubs
A fter winning with the spade and discard his spade losers.
These days you can gel a
calendar featuring Just about

A N N II

GUN W

W *\ « r &amp; M YTW N 61

A U N (March 31-Aprtl 19)
Don‘ 1 lei som ething that oc­
curred in the recent past cause
you to prejudge what Is develop­
ing today and make you re­
sentful. The two events are
unrelated.
TA U R U S (April 30-May 30)
Seek com panions today who
match you In generosity and

and your ability to help could
decrease.

VtROO (Aug. 33-Sept. 22)
Today you m ay do certain things
that are worthy o f praise and
acknowledgm ent. However, you
w on 't look flood If you blow your
own horn. Let the accolades
com e from others.
'
'
.
LIBRA (S ep t. 23-O ct. 23)
Someone whose help you might
want today could back o ff If he
o r sh e fe e ls y o u 'r e asking
assistance in som ething you can
do for yourself. W hen requesting
assistance, be sure It's out o f dire
necessity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't be upset or Jealous today If
som eone you like gets more
attention from others than you
do. Everything m oves in cycles
and shortly It w ill be your turn.
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Domestic conditions In gen­
eral look rather pleasant today,
provided you don 't rehash an old
Issue that recently disrupted the
fam ily.

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                    <text>December

27,

SUNDAY

1992

75 C e n t s

S e rv in g S a n fo rd , L a k e M a ry a n d S a m ln o la C o u n ty t i n e a 1 S 0 S
'

88th Year, No. 108 - 8anford, Florida

Armed
teens
nabbed
Two boys charged in robbery of

news digest

Sanford woman

Bush cams first team All-State
JACKSONVILLE - Lake Brantley's Daryl
Bush has been named io (lie Class 5A Football
All-State first team. All told 10 Seminole County
athletes were mentioned for All-State.
See Page IB.

□ P to p ls

SANFORD — Two teen-aged boys were arrested
by Sanford police Christmas Eve and charged
with armed robbery less than twenty-four hours
after a Sanford woman wss accosted In her home
at gunpoint, police reported.
Sanford Capt. Ralph Russell said a resident of
Glenway Drive answered her door Wednesday
evening and was confronted by a white male
dressed In black with a black mask.

The assailant held a large caliber handgun and
demanded $500, according to police reports.
Russell said when the woman said she didn't
have the money, the masked Intruder took her
into her house and atole her wallet which
contained her credit cards and approximately
•lOOlncash.
"
*
Acting on a tip, police arrested two suspects
Thursday. Russell said a 15-vear-old male robbed
the woman while a 14-year-old acted as a lookout.
The two are being charged with armed robbery,
the use of a firearm in commission of a felony.

In thtrlff’s mtmory
The late Seminole County sheriff, John E.
Polk, left behind countless friends and an
indelible mark on local law enforcement.
His daughter is compiling anecdotes from
friends and family, which she hopes to parlay
into a book about the much-loved man. -

Good samaritdns
make little girl’s
dream come true

altering a serial number on a weapon and the use
of a mask in the commission of a crime.
The two were transferred to the Seminole
County Juvenile Detention Center.
Russell said due to the holidays, police were as
yet pnable to determine If the suspects had prior
arrests records.
Although the department may make a recom­
mendation, the state attorney will decide if the
two are tried as juveniles or as adults, he said.
The neighborhood where the crime occurred Is
not considered a high-crime area, he said.

Loophole
may keep
killer in jail

Two hurt In collision
SANFORD — Two men were seriously Injured
In a Christmas Day auto accident in Sanford.
Sanford Police Dispatcher Joyce Fagan con­
firmed that a 1976 Pontiac driven by Johnny
Lee Williams, 23. and a 1989 Pontiac driven by
Robert Watson. 47. collided near Eighth Street
and Cyprus Avenue In Sanford late Friday
afternoon. The drivers' addresses were un­
available.
Ullyses McCray, a passenger in Williams' car,
and Watson were transported by emergency
helicopter to Orlando Regional Medical Center.
Both were listed in serious but stable condition
Saturday. Fagan aaid.
Sanford police are still investigating the
accident No charges had been filed Saturday.

SANFORD — Essence aits at her desk and
brightens the pages of s new coloring book.
She Sutters her eyes to be sure the visitor
notices the bright blue eye shadow she has
acquired from Santa,
The atx-year-otd had not been sure there

real.
.
“She came to me last week...we talk a lot
because it's Just the two of ua...and asked me
If there really la a Santa and 1 told her that you
really have to believe it in your heart," said
Essence's py4h*r i
s k i , on Satur­
day. “And then are get this delivery from
8 a sta with all that she wished far and we're
going to get seme assistance from the
Salvation A rm y that I didn't think w« could

First 1993 shuttle launch sat
CAPE CANAVERAL — The flrat shuttle
launch of 1993 — a six-day mlssibn in which the
crew will practice spacewalking and release a
satellite —has been set for Jan. 13.
Endeavour Is scheduled to lift oft at 8:52 a.m.
on NASA's 53rd shuttle mission, the space
agency said Tuesday. Eight flights are planned
tor 1993.
. ~
~
'
The crew of five will release a satellite that will
serve as a switchboard in the sky between Earth
and spacecraft such as the shuttle. Four such
satellites already are In operation.
The spacewalk will give the astronauts
practice for working on NASA's planned space
station.

1992 *Man of ths Ysar*
NEW YORK — President-elect Clinton, step­
ping into office at what Time
a “radically
unstable moment id history," is the magaslne’a
"Man of the Year" for 1992.
In an interview accompanying the cover story
in Time's Jan. 4 issue, Clinton cites global
instability as one of his three main concerns as
he prepares to take over the White House.
"We are seeing the flip side of the wonder of
the end of Cold War." he said.
The issue is due out Monday.
Clinton also aaid he hopes to avoid being
r lr u a r n * * I n
v w ln it
n l A l l iW &gt;
i^ C
"bogged down"
in Itrying
to ffulfill
the khigh
expectations voters hold for his administration.
And he hopes his daughter, Chelsea, can
continue to lead a normal life after she moves
into the White House. Clinton aaid.
The Arkansas governor and president-elect is
the 66th recipient of Time's annual accolade.
The award was first presented to aviator Charles
A. Lindbergh in 1927. Last year's winner was
CNN founder Ted Turner.
The award is given to the man or woman the
magasine selects as having had the greatest
impact on world events.

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Mostly cloudy with a
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showers. Highs near
70. Wind northeast
S-IOmph.

SUBSCRIBE

TO

TH E

JULIAN
8TENSTROM

SANFORD — State Attorney Norman WoUlnger
Is confident a legal loophole will keep a convicted
child killer scheduled for release from prison New
Year’s Eve. behind bars.
Wolflnger and Florida Sen. Oary Siegel. RAltamonte Springs, met with Governor Lawton
Chiles In Tallahassee Friday. The aim was to
prevent convicted child-abuser and murderer
Donald McDougall from being released from Jail.
“We're fairly convinced that we'll succeed in
keeping him In Jail.'* Wolflnger said. “Senator
Siegel and I both asked for attorney general
opinions on whether or not his crime meets one of
the exemptions that would prevent his early
release."
“I even brought in a psychologist. Dr. Duncan
Bowan. of Brevard County." Wolflnger aaid. “Dr.
Bowan said as far as he was concerned, what
McDougall did to the little girl amounted to a sex
act. and that would not allow the early release."
He continued. “The doctor also said that it is
expected that anyone convicted of such a crime, if
released this soon, would probably do the same
thing again."
McDougall. was convicted in 1983 of ag­
gravated child abuse and second-degree murder,
in connection with the torture stabbing of Ursula
“Sunshine" Aasald, who eras 8 years-old at the
time of her death. Her body was found in a pond
In Altamonte Springs.
During Friday's conference, the governor re­
vealed plans he had not Intended to discuss until
after the first of the year. According to his
communications director Ron Sachs. “The govemor not only wants to keep McDougall behind
bars, but is tackling a comprehensive reform of

Over 700 needy people feast
at 2 special Christmas meals

SANFORD - More than 700
needy people were well fed and
taken care of for Christmas thanks
to a pair of dinners in Sanford on
Friday.
The Christm as .Feast for the
Needy,
which in past y ean has been
Good grtefl How times does fly. 1 sponsored
by the city Community
Just realised that this is the 120th Development
Office and Central
time that you've allowed me to Florida Services
for the Disadvan­
come into your home and share taged. was sponsored
year by
with you some of the events of the development officethisand
Holy
Sanford's history and people of the Cross Episcopal Church.
“Way Back When" days. The good
About 380 people were served in
lord willing, there'll be 120 more.
the church parish hall over the
1 was shopping in a local drug course
of the day, according to
store a couple of weeks ago. An Leons Orcutt
who helped organise
attractive lady met me in an aisle. the dinner.
Smiling, she said, “Julian, you
‘i t was a beautiful, beautiful
probably don't remember me." I day."
she said. “I think there were a
suddenly noticed she had a familiar lot of people
helped."
expression on h er face, bu t I
Orcutt
said
the feast was not only
couldn't relate It to anyone I could for those who
were financially
think of. Then she aaid, “I'm Sarah disadvantaged, but
also for those
Maxwell."
who
would
otherwise
be alone on
"Of course." I replied as I re­ the holiday.
cognised that expression on her
“We wanted to make the holiday
lace. "You're the daughter of Mrs.
Maybell Maxwell. "She taught me special for those who might have
had an unhappy day for whatever
how totype." .
Mrs. Maxwell taught hundreds of
us how to use a typewriter. She also
Across town at the Sanford Re­
taught bookkeeping. After Mrs. scue O utreach Mission. Mother
Maxwell retired as a teacher I Blanche Bell Weaver, said that
believe she became associated with another 360 people were served
the Seminole County Welfare De­ dinner.
partm ent During the final years of
“That's about what are have every
her life she was head of that day," Weaver aaid. "But we hoped
department.
to make it special for Christmas."
Sarah, who is probably better
Weaver aaid that the addition of a
known as "Saycy." told me she well-organized dinner at Holy Cross

History shared
In 120 columns

SA N FO R D

HERALD

FOR

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FROM

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AND

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No question about top story: It was Andrew
5"

' '"•■l J l .&gt; 'T / '

Floridians went to the poHs In
ISM . dealt w ith a troubled
eco n o m y a n d saw a ta te
fegfefetom struggle with the gov-

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AJL JSk ,
tologtoal parents ■ f t # Mi1Vfme/a/ l f t r m J m / l
A\ T
yw'l' 'eU a T f I
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W
» the nattam. One
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t a baasboU team B T v l ' : l | 1 ^ S |
m htttcrtr ftlean
m -H '
' W 1!
re a t feast tempo- l . l
out traffic on a
J B l
to the Sunshine
1 Haitians flooded
ASsen Wuornos
taleo f ararder on

enormity of Andrew — ’T h e Big
One.”

meanwhite, was spumed again Sen. Carrie Meek, state Rep.
a r h ^ n It*
I I I deal
l i n l to
*n move
m n w the
th#&gt; San
&lt; lin
rV w -H n j. Brown
R m w n and
a n i l ousted
n u i l a H federfn \* r.
when
Oorrtne
Francisco Giants fell through In al Judge Alcee H astings —
the fell. There were even cries gained entry, thanks to a re*
th a t M arlins ow ner W ayne drawn congressional map. But
Hufeeaga had helped sink the Republicans took a 13-10 lead in
move, a charge repeatedly de- the overall delegation balance,
tiled hy the Marita*.
President Bush claimed Flor­
ida. but BUI Clinton won on a
* 4 - Motorists along In
terstate 29fl. a major gateway fo»
tourists from the north entering U.S. Sen. Bob Graham easily
Florida, were kept on edge for won re-election.
'almost a year bv a series of
sniping and rock-throwing InBut Florida voters registered
cldenta along the bypass west of theta discontent with passage of
Ja c k so n v ille . The N ational a term limits measure.
Ouard put patrols on ovetpoaaes
for several weeks, and the Amer- P a tr ic k F r a n k , a
lean Automobile Association put 48-year-old Tennessee drifter,
out a national travel advisory was found guilty of oettlng ftre to
th a t was lilted In tim e for
Thanksgiving travel after a
• 5 — An O rlando Judge
a g re e d la S e p te m b e r w ith

cuts m a budget approved by
prep*rtllf
cruasds. to Improve the state s
alba tax base — this time with a

h ' 'Ml'

^ ^ i^ th e S O ^ m ile v o y a g e
to Florida and taken many
directly bock to the laland nst*on. At y e ars end. Haitians,
&amp;yblg new tactics, smuggling iV m t l w t in the
of
fiehditers. ,
01

• ? : - Ths efectlons In Florida CUnton to make sure all Haitians
hearing on asylum
sferfes la Floridaduriog th sfeat .«
year, eclip sed o n ly b y th e
T h e T a m p a B ay a re a

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�ten ford Herald, ienford, Florida - Sunday, Deeember If, 11

Car stolen, baby found safe
Lane
A resident on Butternut B
B B In
B BLongwood
L „ . - r _ „ reported
- ~ - - _ _ u_hie
reports.
teen-age delimiter halt run away, according to police reports.
Longwood police put,out a bulletin on the 15-year-old Lake
Mary High School student.

Inmats reports souffls
At the Seminole County Jail, inmate Jam es Middleton told
officers that two other inmates Mocked the exit to his cell and
began hitting him, according to police reports. Middleton told
officers tht the other Inmates began punching; hhim with closed
flats,
According to reporta, a second Inmate also said he was
assaulted by the same two men after he had reported a theft.

Possible domestic dlsputs Imreatfgatsd
Longwood police are investigating a possible domestic
dispute Involving a 33-year-old Longwood woman on Cedar
Oak Trial.
Theresa Lucarell told police that she and her boyfriend were
discussing breaking up when he suddenly became violent. She
alleged her boyfriend told her that he had better not i her car
or motorcycle around him.
According to police reports, as the boyfriend left he kicked
the car door. Lucraell attempted to atop him and his grabbed
her hair, according to police reports.
Police were looking for the boyfrtend, according to police
reports.

Tires punctured
The consequence of another possible domestic dispute was
reported to Sanford police by Napolian H unt Hunt told police
he saw a suspect puncture several of his tires when he drove
Into his Truman Btvd. address In Sanford, according to police
reports. Hunt said he believed the action may be a result of the
ending of a boyfrlend/firifriend relationship, according to
police reports.
Police are looking for the suspect.

Woman reports harassment
Osyle Everhart of Onora Road In Sanford reported to police
her former boyfriend was harassing her with telling calls and
possibly following her. according to police reports.
Everhart said she believed her former boyfriend had been
following her and that he had left a number of messages on her
answering machine, according to reports. -

Inddsnt reported to slrariff
•Ja m e s Middleton and Jeffrey Brian Duggan, both Inmates
a t the John E. Polk Correctional Facility, have filed a report
that two men, apparently other inmates, entered their separate
jail cells and beat them with flats. The SbertfTa department Is
investigating the incident.

FORT MYERS — A minister's faith was
sorely tested when his car was stolen from a
convenience atere parking lot with his
10-month-old son tni the back is e a t
*1 prayed, and that was the biggest test of
my faith to totally put my trust In the Lord,"
■aid the Rev. LuTrus Fulton of the Apostolic
ncvivai tcnier*
The harrowing experience ended happily
for the fruntty 40 minutes later with baby
an d c a r found safe and sound In a
restaurant parking lot late Christmas Eve.
Fulton pronounced the event "a miracle"
a f te r p o lic e r e tu r n e d b a b y E aek lel
Johnathan Fulton to Ida parents an hour
iitcf, uic ciiiipprerinpf.
The frunlty crisis started when Fulton left
the engine running as he ducked into a
Circle K store, leaving his wife and child in
the car.

Teens forced
off cliff, live
Associated Frees Writer
LOS ANGELES - Two teen­
agers who survived a terrifying
plunge off a 300-foot cUfftop
were forced to jum p at knife­
point In retaliation for a friend's
suicide, authorities eald.
Rodel Penis. 15. and Evan
Rivera, 23. were among a group
of people present Sunday when
David Salanoa'e younger brother
shot himself in the head, De­
tective Ira Beaty eald Wednes-

-Ktisaboth PuHon
Elisabeth Fulton, 714 months pregnant,
watched as a man walked past, turned
around and jumped in the driver's aeat.
"I'm sitting there at first in shock, and
sayfng 'Hey, hey, what are you doing?' And
he says, ‘OK baby, let's go for a ride,'" she
said. "T hat's when 1 jumped out and was
trying to get Esekte! from his earnest In the
back seat, but he had the car tn reverse and
waadrtvtngotr."
Mrs. Fulton ran into the store screaming,
"Larry, the baby, the baby!"
While the couple waited anxiously with

FALL &amp; WINTER

SEMI-ANNUAL

SHOE CLEARANCE SALE
Starts Monday, Dec. 28 - 9 AM

14-year-old boy, whose
name has not been released,
a p p a r e n tly k ille d h im s e lf
be was upset ovor the
death of an uncle killed In a
gunflght with police days earlier.
Beaty said.
Rivera drove the wounded boy
to a hospital where ha later died,

M-4MM
20 - 40% Off

IneJdente reported to Sanford polio*:
• A TV and VCR were reportedly stolen Tuesday from the
residence of Jennifer Mounts. 1403 W. First Street in Sanford.
•Fashion Flash. 430 S. Sanford Ave.. owned by Lawanda
Johnson, was reportedly burglarised Tuesday. Police said
someone threw a brick throw the front window of the business,
and removed a *80 jogging suit from the hole In the broken
• A storage abed at Rest Lawn
Handy Ave.,

police for word about their baby. Mrs.
Fulton said: "Negative thoughts kept pop­
ping In and out of my mind: What is he
doing to my baby? If he hurting my baby?
Did he have an accident?" 'u
Descriptions of the man and car were sent
to every law enforcement agency from
Tamos to Miami.
"The most trying part of the whole thing
Is that I. as a father, couldn't do anything.!
mean I never felt so helpless In my life."
Fulton said.
The minister thought the thief wouldn't
get far because the car was low on gte.
within the hours, the car was fbuna in
North Fort Myers.
The driver. Brett Warren Cunningham.
26, of Cape Coral, was charged with
kidnapping, attempted kidnapping, auto
burglary, auto theft and grand theft. He was
held on 975,000 bond In the Lee County
Jail.

my
my
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10-SOXOff

r. 35th

'value of*
----------------------------r
burglary w asreported 'T u e s d a y s the horn* of M a t f " t
Rbbtoaod. 930 W' 11th Street In .Sanford, items taken were '
reported to be a large ham taken from the freeser, and a rod
and reel from the living room.

theft. He reW ithout hell
t&gt;
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Shooting victim’s father
gets a visa for funeral
killed Wednesday by a suicidal
aviation worker at an office
Christmas party.
"They were desperate to see
each other," said cousin Helen
Heraandes. "Now U had to be
this tragic way. He's going to be
able to see his eon, but his eon's
not going to be able to eee him."
Department spokesman
Philip Peters eald the visa wss
warranted because of the femlly

SomethingGd,
Something N ew

Azaleas

Item 's aomethinf now to remember, from now on, when you
mate long distance calls within the 407 ana, dial 0 or I +407

SOsL

$7.99

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■no
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nuiuucr jfwi *v wsiung*

Y o m rC b o kx

Citrus Trees

»

Florida's tremendous growth has created a shortage of
telephone numbers. By tfialky the area coda on every Iona
diaunacaU, number* are freed up for new businesses and
residential cudomen.
So remember, when you dianongdistance.be sure to use the
area code. And If you have a 407 long distance number an any
programmed services. Ute Speed Dialing. C4U Forwarding, or
even a FAX machine, now's the time to reprogram them.

M M 12/27/82 - 1/2/B3

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SWEETING

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___ _____

EDITORIALS

His wife became interested in child care and
they developed businesses for themschres. They
became owners and operators of four "Kid Stuff
Child Care Centers,'’ They sold one of the
centers but continue to own one In Longwood.
Altamonte Springs and Orange County.

Van Der Wetde has bean a community acttvtat
for years. He la a member of tM national
Selective Sendee Board. Former Governor
Bap” |ityjs BlfiKMilvvQ sUDl lu ESSCQdJjmOBC WCPIwIlsjf
Planning and Zoning Bawd. Regionally. ha has
LuwJMllk M PdOMUIHITC
A flL
nanth
sldl*TS
^^^n
■wVW Od U
IWHKP
BCT
District 7 Advisory Council. He baa also served
a n the Seminole County Republican Executive
Van DerWekk and his wife, Ji
Central Florida In August, 1974.

of the moat salient mandates he has as a
commiaatoner la to attract meaningful busl■— es to Seminole County - businesses that
more than the minimum wage. He to
pay mom
___ Uteiy pro-family and pro-Jobs, as a means of
definitely
.A ln t A ln li
maintaining
one’s family.
Van Der Weide cited the airport In Sanford aa a
real poaalbtllty for further development. Cur­
rently there are three flights daily from
fra the
airport. Taro flights go to New Jersey and one to
Ft.' Laudentoler More light industry and operaalong the 14 corridor
tiona like Triple A (AAA)
(/
should be sought As Seminole County's land
area becomes utilised, the construction industry
role aa a major factor In our economyy will
diminish. We need to prepare for this possibility.

Van Der Wdde’s child care advocacy led him
to serve as president of the Florida Association
for Child Care Managers and vice president of
National Association far Child Care Managers.

During his campaign Van Der Weide promised
•Leadership that wtULtoten" and that to what he
to doing. He has received numerous letters from
his constituents relative to problems associated
with reftiae pickup In the unincorporated areas.

Van Der Weide la the second youngest of seven
children. He always appreciated his father and
the work he did to support the family. Work not
only provides lor the needs of a family, It brings
dignity and enhances family cohesiveness. One

Van Der Weide and hto wife. Judy, have been
married thirty-one years and are the parent* of
three eons. However. Van Der Weide Indicated
that the person who has really garnered all of hto
attention to hto one-year-old granddaughter.

JA C K

AND ER SO N

Stress-related
comp claims rise
SAN FRANCISCO - Ironic for such a
supposedly laid-back state. California hss
become the capital of workers' compensation
claims for stress on the Job.
And since the state accounts for one-sixth
of the more than S60 billion in coals to this
nationwide system In crisis, state and local
coffers are being drained by what might be
called one of the fastest-growing entitlement

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ponsibility for war crimes

a war crime. Indeed, it area often a war perk.

murderers and child

LE TTE R S

Inhum an troat
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S tre s s -re la te d
claims In California
h a v e le a p e d 7 0 0
percent In the last
decade, one reason
why the Oolden State
this year has been
paying off-its debts
with KHJs. Maybe it's
understandable that
A a s ta ta n t P o lic e
Chief David Dotson,
who wasn't getting
along with form er .■ u *M i ■ ■ ■■i
Police Chief Daryl
Oates in the wake uf ■ Coffers are
the Los Angeles riots, " Mflodralnad
by what might
took a stress leave.
ba called one
But what about at
of
the fastest
le a s t th re e Los
growing
Angeles cops who
antitlamant
filed workers' comp
prograrntj
claims last year —
alleging they suffered
anxiety and stress sir
simply from watching the
famous videotape of the Rodney King bestinf
In California today, it's almost routine for
downs of stress claims to be lodged on the
same day or week of rumored or announced
layoffs or plant relocations. California Insur­
ance Commissioner John Garamendi died
one such example of a garment manufactur­
ing plant shut down In Southern California
last year. Twenty-six employees filed menial
stress claims, using the same attorney and
medical clinic and filing virtually the same
medical report, which was constructed by a
word processor from a checklist.
In another case, about 30 percent of the
employees laid off by&gt; a .Hawthorne. Calif.,
metal door-maker. Security Metal Products
Corp.. tn the last.several years claimed
mental stress for as much a s *35,000 each.
The entire company, which now employs
: 185. moved lock, stock and balance sheet to
Oklahoma, where claims for stress are not as
.compensable.
i
Stress claims can be bustness-bustera for
firms with otherwise proud, accident-free
safety' records. Gary and Brenda DaJtch of
BftO Apparel testified earlier this year that
thetr apparel sewing firm of300-plus workers
got socked with just five stress claims which caused their annual premium to jum p
in a year from *5*400 to *214,000. ; - - js
And if Oynamlca Electronics of Montebello.
Calif., had not been saved by a wealthier
parent Arm. .they would have gone belly up
from stress claims. Forty of thetr 90 workers
Bled stress-related claims on the same day
from the . same legal office with identical
symptoms. The company’s workers' comp
insurance premium Jumped from *5.000 to
*35,000a month.
California Oov. Pete Wltoon haa been
largely stymied from reforming this runaway
by the various special tntere*u_ — nam ely
lawyers — who are getting flu off of
percent ofthe stress claims filed in California,
according to a California Workers' Com­
pensation Institute study, the first notice the
i that an employee has filed a
to from a lawyer. And a wt
whopping
percent of ail atreaa claims are litigated
stress claims in one form
a trauma tic event - such as a robbery or

I

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........... _
directly
related to an o n -the** incident.
Other than that, asosl tts it-t.
don't allow stress claims unless they i
"u n u su a l unexpected or entraordtnan
Thus, Ariaona denied the workers' cot
of a Greyhound bus driver In Pham

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kept attendance
down a little compared to last
year's dinner. She said that they
Ted more than 450 at the dinner
In 1BB1 at the mlsaion.
"I'm glad the people had
someplace else to go. too."
Weaver said.. "(It gave them) a
taste of someone rise's cooking
fora change."
Orcutt said that In addition lo
food, those who came to the

feast at Holy Cross had their
choice of hundteda of Items of
clothing and toys for children as
well as some clothing for young
adults.
Each person who attended
that dinner was also sent home
with a stuffed penguin doll,
donated by Sea World, a bag of
candy and some fresh fruit.
"We had people from all over
helping us," Orcutt said.
Weaver said that donated
clothing and toys were given to

Stenstrom
the Montezuma In my mind's
eye and I can still see the ball
players who roomed there In the
summers. I can still see those
dozens of wooden rocking chairs
that once graced the front porch.
I can stlll-see A.H. Moses and his
son Morris relaxing In those
chairs. Moses and his son were
&gt;duce brokers. They must
ve been successful. When the
First National Bank dosed dur­
ing the Orest Depression. Moses
bought the bank building for
670.000. The cost to build It was
6100.000.
When I pass t
! can
IxodasW s till- s e e Cha
ygent
•IwJ*
-Ate mwell-known. Firs
Jackson- rocking away
_
_
‘artist In store7 I'd say It w*».at least five
E.B. Stowe met Ad­ feet wide arid 13 feet’in depth. It
m iral Dewey, th e Spanish- had to be the smallest store that
American War hero. My caller Sanford ever had. Wert himself
said he understood the hotel was
a very diminutive gentle­
situated on the site where Jack­ man and he and his store fit
sonville's one-time famed de­ each other like a glove.
p a rtm e n t s to re " C o h e n
Brothers." was located. My caller
A nother tld-blt about the
said he also knew that the St. Mathleux brothers. Orie and Joe.
Jam es was destroyed by fire, but and their sister Eva. Not long
he wondered when.
ago Eva waa presented with a
I got In touch with Stowe. The •certificate by the State of Florida
alert 96-year-old artist promptly for maintaining continuous fami­
replied. "1801."
ly ownership of the original
Mathleux homestead for 100
Writing about hotels. I found years or more.
but something about a local
establishment 1 didn't know. I
And here’s another tld-blt you
knew the long-standing Mon­ might find Interesting. A survey
tezuma at Magnolia and Third waa made many years ago to
Street was originally known as d e te r m in e if th e F lo r id a
the Bi-Low Hotel. I was first told Everglades could be drained.
that by old-timer Ashby Jones. I Among Ute surveyors In the
' team that the hotel had party was 8.0. Chase. St., who
Sanford's first swimming pool. later, with hia brother Joshua,
But that's not alii It was indoors.
founded Sanford's well-known
Chase and Company. Another
Every now and then I drive by was the man who later became
sends the "Way Back When"
columns almost every week to
her brother on the Florida East
Coast. Her brother la Dick Max­
well. We talked about Dick being
a member of that 1966 Seminole
High School baseball team on
which the late Red Barber
played. And. she mentioned how
much Dick like the columns.
It was great to see Sarah again.
And folks, for the benefit of those
of you who have not seen her
lately, she looks absolutely
great. g |M R |f l

K

Ettanc*-—
U

landlord has helped get her
through name hard times.
"We signed a seven month
lease, but we didn't have to pay
a security deposit or anything
like that, she said.
Mike Novoaat said he tries to
"Ho (Capt. Bergen) went to help whoever he can.
Walmart on Christmas Eve and
"We're all poor people." he
made sure that her wish would said. "I know how It is."
During the move. Charlotte
come
said
Joy
**W*VVW true."
M
IIMH Mrs. Capt.
11' •
Bergen
. _ ____
also„ o f........i
the | Saiva
Salvation admitted, she last all of her
photo Identification and the ap­
Army.
T he M llesea w ere liv in g pointment Information from the
elsewhere In Sanford when they. Salvation Army regarding when
signed up for assistance with the she needed to pick up the food,
Salvation Army. But Charlotte's clothing and toys they had
financial situation forced a move gathered for her. She thought
to -th e Oabtcs Apartments, on sh e w ould be d isq u a lifie d
Magnolia Avdnue where the without the paperwork.

Salvation Army, the letter
canter played Santa and was
___ to deliver the gifts along
able
rt collected
with some other toys
by the Salvation Army volun-

On o cold and windy afteritoya. dressed In Jeans
nkw t u k k — Latoya Hunter
Is just 14 y u an old. but recently and gold hoop earrings, was
the mall brought a packet of b h e k In h e r o ld B r o n x
le tte r s from te e n -a g e rs In neighborhood, giving a reporter
Brooklyn, many of them girls a tour. She harbors no nostalgia
seeking advice about -boys and for It
"It really makes you feel down
their parents.
"As I was reading It,-I couldn't to walk around and see the
believe It." says Latoya, whose 1 things around -you." she wrote.
face still has the softness of "The only ootors I see are brown
childhood. "I mean, I'm going and gray — dull colors. Maybe
through those problems now there are others but the dull
ones are the ones I see. Maybe if
ahd they think I am an expert."
They think she 1* an expert the streets were cleaner, and I
because they know her deepest would see colors like red and
thoughts, expressed In a diary yelllow, my surroundings would
i ore ip p f i nng« •••
she kept during her first year In be ni
Until she was 8. Latoya was
Junior nigh school.
raised by relatives In Jamaica
published earlier this year. Is while her parents were in the
about the stuff of young girls' New York area struggling to
lives “ scnod, menasiups, ooys, make a new life for themselves.
television, th e urge for In­ Latoya's old house, where she
dependence and conflicts with lived with her family on the
second floor, has a chain-link
her mother.
But the slim volume, which fence In front and flowers In the
runs 131 pages, goes deeper. Ills planters that, she says, make It
better than U did when she
also about being a black. Immi­ llook
i ----.J
those In need who came for grant girt growing up In the iivcq mere.
"It was the ugliest house on
Bronx.
supper at the mission.
Latoya wrote In her diary the whole block." she says.
"I think people went to the about the gray, treeteao streets of "And I never liked to bring
other place early In the day and her neighborhood, the deadly anybody over.
Relatives live In the groundviolence around her. teen-age
came to us for supper." she said.
All In all. the organisers of pregnancy, the poverty of caring floor apartment. Eager to see a
both dinners said that their and learning at her r ho d and newborn cousin. Latoya drops
by for a visit.- A stale smell Alls
her homesickness for Jamaica,'
events went well.
It's the ordinariness of her th e dark, sparsely furnished
"When you do Cod's work. He
The walls ore stained and
blesses you.” Orcutt said. "We pre-*do)escent world against this
did a lot of His work yesterday troubled background that draws
Today, her mother. Llnneth.
(Friday), but It was exhilarat­ the reader Into her diary. Latoya
works evenings as a nurse's
rhapsodizes - about her pa
ing."
aide; her father. Linton, works
for Junk food and TV. and.
overnight so a security guard.
In painfully d e a r prose, s
about the gunshots that killed a And Latoya now Uvea In a
well-kept apartment In a blue
store clerk who sold her candy.
p resid en t of H enry P la n t's
“Today gunshots echo tn my house on a tree -lined street In
railroad that ran from Jackson­
Latoya wrote on Jan. 9. Mount Vernon, a city Just north
ville to Tampa. Also a member of 1991.
of the Bronx, o
that party was the father of Orie.
"They1 are the same gunab
Joe and Eva Mathleux.
out
uuu kujcu bh innocent mini
being right across from my slowly, but the media fw * * * *
I ran Into a fellow one day who house loot night. Thsy ore this has been overwhelming. Latoya
said he remembered a grocery same gunshots *
has been Interviewed by report­
store on Elm Avenue around me. I think, fore
ers. appeared on television talk
Fifth Street and another at
Palmetto and 22nd Street. You
Latoya’s
m uat rem em ber th at "W ay beyond Its old Bronx
Back" then there was no such
1A
of n
thing as zoning.
newspaper
our entire prison sentencing
Folks, I recall the store on Elm her gtft for writing.
system lo eliminate the basic
Avenue between Fifth and Sixth
"I think It was mostly hick," gain lime.”
Latoya says.
"Even before the meeting."
But then
adds, "I
Sachs said, '/T h e governor had
like. I am a good
prepared a letter that will be sent
of lim .d ip ig w S ^V cra for people around my age, for to Attorney. QcneraL Bob !But
and Hazel. }Vera
kids .who feel that they don't terworth. asking him to look Into
year ajp. Hazel
count In anything, that they're all legal recourses the stale has
* player on that famed 1B3B being * ‘ * * *
In order lo find a hook with
Sanford baseball club. Red they i
w hich we can legally - hold
Marion. He was the brother of
McDougall. biit all others In a
the famous St. Louis Cardinal
shortstop “Slats" Marion.
lire ta .
"He wants to eliminate the.
Now, a b o u t th e sto re a t
A
article b a s ic g a in t i m e . " S a p h s
Palmetto and 22nd Street. I
o fLa lo ya 'o explained. "That's Ume that is
understand It was operated by a six th -g ra d e c la s s s a id b s r shaven off a prisoner's sentence,
Mrs. HulT. I know nothing about English teacher wrote "The even before he spends much
this store. Do you? If so. give me world ta waiting for Latoya!" on
a call.
r report card. An editor a t a
—
BUIbushing company saw the
In a recent column I wrote
about Cliff Proctor's Trianon
He contacted
t-^ fhre to
being destroyed by fire right
after Its big first anniversary
her first
rty. I've now been told that In Junior high
eras of­
fore the night spot became the fered* a 96,000
95,060 advance and will
Trianon It was called “Perk's r e c e i v e 9 6 6 . OOP f o r th e
Place."
I can recall only the name.
"Perk's Place." But I freely Diary." then she
admit I have no Idea where It
was or If It later became the • You've
Trianon.
frtend to me." 9hs named It
We'll be with you again next
Sunday morning.
"I Uke guys,
"There. J said I t It’s easy ta say
to you. but my mother would
"Certainly not," said Mrs. give ms a. real hard time if aba
Capt. Bergen. "We had all these beard me say th a t She beUsree
things ready and waiting for her. ■ norm al 16 year old sh a
We never even knew there was a* obey
problem."
team her teaaona. and come
As a matter of fact. Charlotte home everyday, and Uetcn to her
will go to the Salvation Army on parents some more."
Monday to get food to fill her
She recounts her first rale*
refrigerator, as well as more toys
f it h a boy (they didn't
and clothes for Essence.
go
they -jiiot opened
hearts over the telephone), her
"We'll have Chrtstmks all over brother's w elding (she was a
again," she said.
bridesmaid hi blue). the birth of
Miles said that people in San­ her unlim ited stator's boy. and
ford have been very kind and a m u c h -a n tic ip ate d trip to
helpful as she Is struggling to get
that lift her deeply
on her feet.
Her TO flflw iN ' “ With un­
"We Just have Christmas ail derstanding I think I wlU achieve
year long." she said.
l L

n i, n* ■

S_» t — J

Release--------

K

Joseph 8. Wlxtcd, Jr.. 63. of 6
East S treet Boynton Beach, died
T h u rsd ay , Dec. 64 a t JFK

MMper for a plant 1973. Ha
a 3 a member of CH Steva
Chitvah o f th e H om »a&lt;

a i

shows and news programs —
Including one that airs In Japan
— and met the Jamaican prime
minister.
Two movie companies artbidding for the rights to the
book, says Richard Marek, her
editor at Crown Publishing Inc.
But Latoya says wistfully that
her parents have never talked to
her directly about the diary's
contents, although she believes
both have read It.
"If I do an Interview or some­
thing, they say. T m proud ol
you* and stuff, but they never
really said that to me about the
book, like, you know. 'You did a
good Job and I'm proud of you."’
She's a sophomore In high
school, having skipped a grade
In school. Ithaca College and
Columbia University have al­
ready approached her. she says.
S h e w a n t s to s t u d y
psychology and also be a writer.
She also says that after she has
had a Job for a year, she wants to
have a baby.
Sitting at her dining room
table, she fidgets with a pendant
n eck lace b elo n g in g to h er
mother. She la shy. soft-spoken,
b u t a r t i c u l a t e . " I t ' s lik e
everybody's dream to be In
America. And now that 1 am
here. I Just don't want to waste
the opportunities l have."
But os doors open to worlds
■he never dreamed existed, there
Is a loss of Innocence to which
she Is still adjusting. In her
diary, she wrote: 'T ve never
com e across discrim ination
against me for being black.” .
Now she has.
A few weeks ago. when she
went to the Manhattan office of a
national women's magazine to
be interviewed about her book,
the woman at the front desk
asked "if I waa there to deliver
anything."
"She could have said, like,
'Could I help you?* or some­
thing." Latoya reflects. "...I
guess they didn't expect some­
one like me to be there."
time In Jail. It's done because of
thie flaws In our system, and
because of what some people
believe is an overcrowding situa­
tion in our Jails."
WoHlnger sa# .£ p h c !w f* te rv
of the Department of CorrecUontt
Is suppared .to .review, special
crimes to determine if k prisoner
qualify* for the early •release
program." He added. "In the
case of McDougall. It wasn't
done, and we want to find out
whv."
Wolflngcr estimated II may be
Tuesday or Wednesday before
the Att
ttorney General will Issue a
nse. McDougall la to be
released from prison in Madison ,
County, on Thursday.

i
r.

I

f

I

...............................................

Sunday, December 27, 1002 -

�t

WNRPMm H N M P

'If'wlnutux
■

M - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - 8unday, Dacambar 27, 1092

World War II bases live on
as zoos, hospitals, airports

Legal Notice

Ltflil N o tlo i

eoTtCBoe

Is on another blimp base site.
In Sanford, the Navy settled In
at what Is now the Central
Florida Regional Airport.
In Tallahassee. Army pilots.
Including those of the famed
all-black 99th Fighter Squadron,
trained at Dale Mabry Field, now
the city’s airport. "One of the
trainees accidentally while flying
over the city fired his machine
guns," recalled retired Florida
House Clerk Allen Morris, then a
newspaper columnist. "It scared
the hell out of everybody."
No harm was done, but that
wasn’t always the case.
"The slogan used to be. 'One a
day in Tampa Bay.' That's how
frequently they crashed," said
Nick Wynne, executive director
of the Florida Historical Society.
Pilots trained at three Tampa
bases: MacDIU Air Force Base,
Which rem ains active: Drew
Field, now Tampa International
Airport: and Henderson Field,
the site of Busch Gardens, two
breweries and the University of
South Florida.
The Air Corps set up Its largest
a e ria l g u n n e r sch o o l a t
Buckingham Field near Fort
Myers. Lee County's mosquito
control planes now use the field.
Arcadia becam e a hub of
primary (light training with the
reactivation of two World War 1

Nam* ot D l CORATI V I O fSIONI BY DORIS, an* that I

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT,
EtfN TE E N TN JUDICIAL
CINCUrr.lNANDPOR
StMIHOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. i V7-M0S-CA-1SK
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
BANK, a Fodaral Savings Sank,

One became a zoo. Another Is
a mental hospital. Two are
spring training baseball parks. A
couple more are prisons. Some
are college campuses, airports
and Industrial parks.
Fifty years ago, they were
among about 160 military In*
stallatlons, from tiny outposts to
huge bases, that sprang up
across Florida. They Joined eight
existing bases to train more than
1 million U.S. and allied troops
for World War II. Nearly all were
deactivated afterward.
Dozens of tourist hotels also
were pressed Into service. Miami
Beach atone trained a fourth of
the Army Air Force officers and
a fifth of the enlisted men.
Charlton W. Tebcau wrote In his
1975 book "A History of Flor­
ida."
"V irtually every hotel on
Ocean Drive was taken over by
the Army," said Miami historian
Paul George. "The whole area
was like an armed forces camp."
Soldiers and sailors, some on
horseback, patrolled beaches
and blimps flew overhead In
search of U-boats.
Florida's flat landscape and
balmy weather were Ideal for
flight training bases. Present-day
airports In Sanford. Miami, Fort
Lauderdale. West Palm Beach.
Tampa. Fort Myers, Gainesville.
Sarasota. Punta Gorda, Naples.
Opa-locka, Leesburg. Daytona
Beach and other cities started as
military airfields or were tempo­
rarily turned over to the Army or
Navy.
The weather wasn't always
cooperative. A hurricane In 1045
ripped apart Richmond Naval
Air Station, a blimp base 13
miles south of Miami. A fire
sparked by the storm destroyed
three huge hangars. 35 blimps,
366 airplanes and 150 cars.
R ich m o n d h a s re m a in e d
star-crossed. It became the site
of Miami's MetroZoo, ravaged by
Hurricane Andrew this year.
Also In Miami, th e Navy
turned an airline terminal and
Into the Dinner Key
base. The terminal now
is Miami's city hall and the
hangars are auditoriums.
Elsewhere In Dade County, the
Bayalde Festive Marketplace la
on the site of a submarine tm iiser'
school, Bicentennial Parle was a
Navy port, Miami ^International
Airport was Miami Naval Air
Station and uto w i-nnki Com­
munity College's north ^ " p 1*
•1
' i.J

B ritis h p ilo ts tra in e d a t
Carlstrom Field where French
aviators learned to fly during
World War 1. A civilian con­
tractor, Riddle Aviation, con­
ducted the training at Carlstrom
and nearby Dorr Field.
G. Pierce Wood Memorial Hos­
pital, a state mental Institution,
is on the Carlstrom site, and
DeSoto Correctional Institution
is at Dorr.
"Unless someone had an aerial
view map then and now, they
would not recognise It as the
sam e p la c e ," sa id H ow ard
Melton, who had a wartime job
fueling planes at the Arcadia
fields.
Army contract training also
was conducted at the Lodwlck
School of Aeronautics in Lake­
land, now the spring training
home of the Detroit Tigers.
T he L ob Angeles Dodgers
training complex to on part of
the former Vein Beach Naval Air
'Stkttoh.-Tbefrest toVero Beach's
h
:
AVES who worked' a t the
ituH it River In an old hotcL the
Site of a present-day Holiday Inn,

said Ruth Stanbridge, president
or the Indian River Historical
Society.
"We have quite a few couples
now celebrating their 50th anni­
versary," she said. "That Indian
River didn't separate them."
Pensacola Naval Air Station
was a major pilot training site
and retains that rote to this day.
Several auxiliary bases in
Pensacola also continue ih use,
except for EUyaon Field. It was a
helicopter training center from
the 1950s through 1976 and
then became an Industrial park
with truck terminals, a soft
drink bottler and plants pro-,
dudng athletic wear, boats and
treated lumber.
Jacksonville also remains a
naval center. Lee Field, an aux­
ilia ry b ase a t G reen Cove
Springs, was turned Into a port
for mothballed ships until 1964
and it, too. became an industrial
park, said Landless Rowell, of
the Florida Aviation Historical
Society.
In the Panhandle. Eg!In and
Tyndall Air Force bases and
Hurlburt Field remain active,
but another nearby Installation,
the Marianna Army Airfield, to
the city's airport and site of a
Sunland Center for the mentally
disabled, an industrial park and
a federal prison, said Claude
Reese, president of the Chipola
Historic Trust.
Immediately after the war It
had been used for a tuberculosis
hospital and Chipola Ju n io r
College, but it was reactivated
from 1953 through 1960 as
Graham Air Force Base, said
Reese, who was a flight In­
structor there.
Orlando International Airport
b eg an a s P ln e c a a tle A rm y
Airfield, said Prank Mendota,
librarian for the Orange County
Historical Society. It continued
as a bomber base alter the war
and was .renamed McCoy Air
Force Base before being turned
over for civilian use In the early
1970s.
Nearby Orlando Army Airfield
continues partly as a military
Installation, th e Orlando Naval
Training Center. Another part Is
O rlando E xecutive A irport.
T h e Banana River Naval Air
S tatio n , a blim p base n e ar
Cocoa, also switched services. It
now to Patrick Air Fores Base.

Sanioid •Lake Mary - Seminole

FICTITIOUS MAMS
la

Ifwf 1
1 a bUtkWtt «t mo

Seminal* County

inm D rp rppiiTwr m

n ,m ,

wHti tea Secretary at Stata,
TH tahaoere. Florida. a ac-

cwaenc* with im prwiiwn w
te* Fktittoua Nama Statvta,
Ta-WIt: Saetten MSS*. Florida
Statvta* 1*0.
*
OamK-Baana
Pubflta: December 17. If*!

oizasi

None i os

FICTITIOUS NAMS
Naitea li hereby given that wa
ana engaged a kuilneei at NS

S im u la Mi i a
u |iu |a
niW
TTl 3Th&gt;wWIBPVWM*RBw
TTiiTRTTW

County, Fterlda. under Ma
FIcttMeu* Ha-no o&lt; C RBATIVI
SCULPTURE BY JOHANNA.

a.n&lt;a R 4'

lm
• » *■ a
vve^Ew

Utosid AmMalatos

u M nama with ttw Secretary ot
Stala, THlehewe*. Fterlda. a
at ttw Fktttlaua Nama Statute,
To-Wit: lactten SSISI. Florida
Statute* m i.
JaSomaB. Drummond
Dreg N. Drummond
PuMMi: 0*combarl7.1t*l
DEZ-MS
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS N AM I
NaHco It hereby «lvan that wa
ara engaged In butlneta at *M
Albarta St.. Lanawood. Samlnala
County, Florida. und*r tha
Fktlttoua Nama ot ISLAND
LAKE OALLBRY. and that wa
(a

M
a la S w u
U
UW H
^WwTw^Art
BtoTwi

with tha Sacratary ot Slate.
Tallahan a*. Florida. a ac-

CQTUSnGi1W
ith Tret1pvwYlIroni Or
_-w— —.-_....l.JUfc. i d k A --------- »-■ ----------

tea Pkfttieu* Nama Statute,
Ta-WIt: (action BUS*. Florida
Statute* 1*17.
Johann* B. Drummond
OraaN. Drummond
Publish: 0*c*mS*rt7.1**1
DBZ-SS4

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
N*tk* h hereby given that wa
or* *nan*d In kuetaee* at M il
OMa Av*.. SanterdL F L S777J,

tVmlftofVUnwIrTf rNrlMi U*MT
tea Fldttteu* Nama of FIVB
SMOOTH STONES, and teat wa

m—»■
•niwWi W EwpiwIVv BW
^EEmoE
^M
v^W

IdaAM^d Ak i^ A la ia #

with tea Sacratary at State.
Tallahaata*. Fterlda. In accordanc* with lh* prevltiene at
tea Fktttlau* Nama Statute.
Ta-WH: Sadtan MSS*. Florida
Statute* t*P.
Edward L. Katoy
ViterteC Kaaky
Pubitih: 0*c*mfaor 17,1**l
DEZ-MS
IN TNS CIRCUIT COURT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N O .flM M CA 140
SOUTHERNCONTRACT
SUPPLY d/b/a BUILDERS
CARPET A TILE.
Plaintiff,

vt.

OENE MARIE SELWYN.
Defendant.
NOTICE OF ACTION
To: Gono Mario Stlwyn
MS Broadview Avoouo
Altamonte Springe; F L 17701
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to anforco a IIan on tha
lotlowing property In Somlnolo
County, Fterlda:
Lot 4*. BARCLAY WOODS.
1st Addition according to ttw
plat tearato as rocardsd In Plat
Bash 17. Past M. Public Roe
onto at Somlnolo County.
ha* batn Iliad against you and
you ara ragulrad ta serve a copy
at your written detente*. It any.
ta It on William B. Pringle, III.
Etquire. M N. Oranga Avenue,
Sulla S00, Orlande. Florida
MMl, an *r betera January S,
HR, and tlla Itw original with
tea dark ot tel* Court either
before servlet on Plaintiff'*
attorney or Immediately there
after; otherwise, a dsleull will
be entered against you ter ttw
rWtef demanded In Itw Com­
plaint.
Dated an Dacambar J. 17*1.
(Seal)

hAoft,.

as Clark at said Court
•y: Ruth King
M Dm i I v Ckrk

Publish: Otcember S, II, M. 77,
ltd
DEZ-tJ

M HILtillH Irl iniWrwVl Iw
California Fodaral Savins* and
LaanAaaociatten.
Plaintiff,

ROBERT
HYLBRi
VEST
MANAGEMENT CO IN C a
Flartda carpurolten; SOUTH­
EAST LAND TITL E A SALES
CORP.. a dissolved Florida corparatteni JAMES MERRIMANt
and JOHN DOC and JANE DOE
(OCCUPANTS).
NOTICE OF ACTION
Ta: VEST MANAGEMENT
CO INC _____
a Florid* corporation
IIS Laurel Avenue
Suite A '
SOUTHEAST LANO TITLE A '
SALES CORP.
a dHaalvad Fterlda
UMOene Strati
Winter Fart. Fterlda
AND ALL OTHERS WHOM IT
MAYCONCERN:
YOU ARE NOTIFIED teat an
action to forectoao a mortgage
an tha teUmrlng described prop­
erty located In Seminal* County,
Florid*:
Ttw W**t IM te*t at Late l and
I, Blech A Reaallnd Haights,

•ccoraing w Tnwpin vnvriQf n

rocardsd In Plat Book S, Page
*7. at tea Public. Rucardt ot
Somlnolo County, Florida,
has boon tiled against you and
you art ragulrad to serve a copy
ot your written detaneos. It any,
to It on Robert 0. Wilson, at
Simmon* and Orey, P A .,
Plaintiff’s attorneys, whose
address I* Post Office box SStO.
Ocala. Florida 74470, on or
bolero January if, l**S. and tlla
tea original with tea Cterk ot
tel* Court either before service
on Plaintiff* attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter: otherwise a
default will be entered against
you tar ttw relief demanded In
ttw complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tea
seal ot this Court on this ttw tlrd
day el December. It*}.
(SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE
Clark at tea Courts
■yHaatear Brooks
Deputy Cterk
Publish: December 17. Iffl A
January 1. 10.17, if*i
DEZ-MS
ADVERTISEMENT
FORUM
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Sanford.
Florida will receive bids at ttw
office at ttw School Board, till
Saute Msltenvllte Avonuo. San­
ford. Fterlda. 11771. until 1:00
p.m., January 11, l*fl at which
time bid* will be opened ter tee
construction Ot:
NEW WALKWAY COVER A T
LAWTON ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL
ill ORAHAM AVENUE
OVIEDO, FLORIDA M7SS
•Id must be accemponled by
bid depaell: A **d band. Cash­
less Check of CarWftad Owe*
tar five (1%) percent at the total
riTha _____.

dTLIP
M
enaaiB
StoulA
HIM
rm
BIfl^^MPi^MPNMJMMFtf^flBdbM
11NM
•w
i1R
1lIl
Band ter tea total amount el tea
award
wttein ten (if) days at
_ . i n , - * , —. _a

nrnnKimnv«inviwini.

must bo written by a
company licensed to do
Min Florida.

bo available tram David R.
AIA, Director at Facili­
ties Planning and Construction,
laminate County Public School*,
tilt Msltenvllte Avenue, (an
tord, Flartda 11771, telephone
(M7&gt;m -UU extension ITS. A
dMoalt ot SMBS including state
sale* tax par sot Is ragulrad
which Is refundable whan a
responsive bid Is submitted and
tha Construction Document* ara
returned In goad condition
within fifteen (II) dors tram tea
date bid* ere recelwd.
There will he* pre-bid tenterence hold at LauHm Elementary
( cheat at M:M a.m. an January
tl, t**A condstlng at review ot
tea prelect. Al tel* ttm* tea
Owner** representative* will
discus* the prelect r e tir e ­
ment* and precadures. Con­
tractors ara strongly ancauragad to attend. Failure to
attend dees not relieve the
Mddw team tea rewanaMIlty to
carry aut the work In tha
manner dtecuand at tea canteronce- TMe prebid contorenco
dm* net relieve tea biddws ot
tha an-slte Inspectten at the

I t Z S T r S T T P : In
tea baarg'*bast l^*S*r**t.
Dgted Rite tord day at 0*e*m-

tor.lNR.

/■/OevtdN. Spoor, A.IJL
Otesctor at Fadlttte*
FtenMnaAConHrwctten
PuMWi: Dacambar 17. Iffl
OCZ-H4

G AR A G E SALE
GUIDELINES

Ltflil No IIc m
IN TNB CIRCUIT COUNT
OF T N I BIDHTBSNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 9MS77-OR-M-B
In tea matter at ttw Adaption at;
ANTHONY NONALOFBACH
d/oAJunal.m t
a minor child
•Yi ABNER 8RIONONI,
Petitioner.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : RONALDO. PEACH
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that an Action tor Adop­
tion ot Anthony Ranald Peach
ha* ba*n filed against yew and
you are ragulrad to serve a espy

foyf wrinon ofrffiwi, n ony*

to H an ABNER BRIONONI,
F ro so Fatlllaner. whose
address Is MSS Fexhlll Circle.
IMS. Apapka, Florida MTU. an
or batore January 1*. iffl and
hta tea original with tea Cterk al
tel* Court either before service
un ttw Petitioner or immediately
there*tierj aftwrwlm a detauii
will b* entered against you tor
the relief demanded In the
Petition.
WITNESS my hand end seal
of this Court on December U.
Iffl.
(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE
A l Clerk ot said Court
By: /*/ Jeyco Ctecfctoy
Aa Deputy Clerk
Publish: December M, 77, lf*7
A January], IS, Iff]
DEZ-Ill
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNB BIONTBBNYH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOL1 COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.:
n-IM ICAHK
LOMAS M ORTOAOE USA,
INC., OtC.,
Plain! lit,
RICK E. KLIN O EN SM ITH,

ale.,

NOTICE OF M LB
NOTICE It hereby given teal
pursuant to Itw Final Judgment
at Farectoeure and Sate entered
In tea cause pending In tea
Circuit Court at tha EIOHTE E NTH Judicial Circuit,. In
and tor SEMINOLE County,
Florida. Civil Action Number
*7-1MICA UK tea undersigned
Clerk will tall ttw property
situated In said County, daLet* MO end an. FLAN OF
LONOWOOO, according to tea
plat thereof at recorded In Flat
beak l, Paget If through II
Inclusive, Public Record* at
Somlnolo County, Florida
together with all structures.
Improvements, fixture*, appli­
ance* and appurtenance* on
said land or used In can|«xwtion
therewith, at public salt, to Rw
highest and boet bidder tor cash
al 11:M o'clock AJW., an tea Ifte
day at January, tfM, al tea
West Freni deer at tee SEMIHOLE County Courthouse, Sanlerd. Fterlda.
(COURTSEAL)
M ARYANN! MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUITCOURT
Jy:0*rcteyW . Bolton
Deputy Cterk
*WuMtth: December SA17, iffl

-IIS

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT.
BIRHTEBNTM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SEMI NOLICOUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. fl-tttS-CA
DIVISION: 1+0
CITIZENS FIOBLITV RANK
AND TRUST COMPANY, d/h/a
PNC MORTOAOE SERVICINO
COMPANY
CLINTON C. WALTON: Hal..

b« M m n «M

CnmMi __
CtWIBt •M U I MlMDI toll
p •hSk/niMM •leal ISmtehg
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IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O RTNBEM NTRBNTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
OENBRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. f+MS-CA-l+K
H O M E U N I T Y S A V IN G S
RANK, RaSA.
Plaint IN.

MARYANNS MORSE
Aa Cterk al said Court
Ry:Dare«ww.EoNen
As Deputy Cterk
Pubttek: December Ml 17, M E
DEZ-MS

"

•

sponsibility to carry out tee
work In te* manner ditcuibed H
te* conference. This pre-bid
contorenco dee* not relieve tee
bidders H tee en-tlto Inspection
H Itw prelect requirement*
Ttw Board reserve* ttw right
to waive miner Intormalltle* In
tee bidding II sold waiver It In
te* Beard's best Interest.
Dated tel* llth day H Decem­
ber, IN I.
/s/Oevld R. Spoor, A.I.A.
Director ot Facilities
Planning A Construction
Publish: December TA 77, Iff7
A January A H*3
OEZ-IT7
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE 1STH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT,INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA. '
CASE NO: OMMI-CA-tt-O
HOUSEHOLD RANK. F.S.B.
Plaintiff,
JOHN 0. HILL and JULIE A.
HILL, hi* wife: JOHNSTOWN
A M E R IC A N C O M P A N IE S
n/fc/a T H I CONSOLIOATIO
COMPANIES: NOR WE ST FI­
NANCIAL FLORIDA. INC., and
UNKNOWN TCNANT(S).
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: JOHNSTOWN AMERICAN
COMPANIES

jJWHBWSRTc
14 West Minister Avenue
BlUebaM, Nate Jersey tTMi
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED teH an art Ian hot been
I ta toredaaa * mart—

and situated In Samlnala
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , m ar*
particular delin ked a* tellew*:
LH 1, BRANTLEY POINT,
according te tea Plot fhereH, aa
recorded In PIH Reek SA Page
71, Public Record* H Seminole
County, Flertde
mare cammanly known a* 171#
Blackman Court, Lungwaod,
Florida 1777*.
This action haa boon tiled

7 ORX-Itt

In P M Beak II,
SA St and M. Public Record* H
imbwte County, FterldaDATED tele llth day H O a -

r

SEMI N O L l'^ O UN T Y

PUBLIC SCHOOLS, MsrNte win
receive Wd* H the oftver H tee
School Beard, 11)1 South
Me IIonvl lie Avenue, Sentord,
Florida, M771, until 1:10 J*.m.,
January IS, Iff! H which time
bids will b* opened tor te*
construction Hi
e l e m e n t a r y SCHOOL " t South Cllrut Baulavard
Seminole County, Florida
Eld must bo accompanied by
bid deposit: A Bid Band, Cash
tor's Owch or Cortlfted Owck
tor flva (1 ») poreant H tea total
amount Md.
Ttw succaatul bidOer shall
fumlth a Partormanc+Fayment
Bond tor tea total amount H te*
award wllhln ton (IS) days H
nonfiction H ttw award. Band*
mutt b* written by a surety
company licensed to do buelnatt
In Florida.
Drawings and »p*&lt;Ifleaftons
w ill be a v a ila b le tra m
SRFH/Archlteelt - Englneorv
1771’ Sunlra* Boulevard,
Melbourne. Florida ItfSS,
(S07)7IS-7*S*. A deposit at
STte.00 Including state tele* tax,
per eel It required which It
refundable when a responsive
bid It submitted and te* Con
etrvctlon Document* ere re
fumed In good condition wllhln
fltteon III) day* tram te* date
bid* are received.
There will be e prebid centerone* held at tee Media Service*
Conference Room an January A
Iffl. al 10:80 a.m. eon»l*llng H
review H ttw prefect. Al this
time Ih* O w ner's re p re ­
sentative* will ditciwt Me pre­
lect requirement* end pro
ceduret. Contractor* are
strongly encouraged to attend.
Failure to attend dee* not re­

a

to

, »

ADVERTISEMENT

NOTICE OF M LR
qulred te tarva a copy H your
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
teal, pursuant to a Summary
written detent**. If any, I* It on
Final Judgment w Farectoeure
ROBERT F. HOOOLAND, PA..
entered herein, I will ertl the
A ttorrwy, where address It 107
ly sifueled In Seminole
Wsklva Springe Raed. Suite Ml,
, Flerlda, describedat:
Lanfwaaa, Flartda M77* an
L a i 1 1 , B l a c k I I , baton llth day H January,r
and file te* *rtgln*l with
W EATHBRSFIELO SECOND
Cterk
H tele
Court Htoer be
ADOITION, according to tea
--------- 1 —
re :-i - n m . ^ ~
Mfvicv
rw im ifri •npmvy w
p i l l T T w flP I I r f C w M l HI r w
•oak I t Fagot Ml and ML at
tear; other---«—— _ X - « . j g -■-»** — --- * ----- -O
tee Public Records H Semtrwte
w«m • iifiytT •nil n unvrac
County, Flartda.
Enaagad
IIW1RRV leg
Nl iAa
IToWfjUiLlllalpl
MniqHBfnt,
H public sale, to Ma htehaat and
Iwrne*
In .
* A S L ^ l^ M S
Hgflwf
IWe W iH lf WS
WITNESS my hand and taH
VlUtIVBUMWill VTIflw •WfifFIBMi H tel* Court an ttw Hh day H
In
FterlSe. H tl:M e'ctech a.m. an
(SEAL)
January I t Iffl.
MARYANNS MORSE
WITNESS my hand and of­
Cterk H the Circuit Court
■y: Fatrtda F. Haate
ficial teal H said Court tele
OeputyCterk
December U. tfft.
Pubfleh: Decamber IA SO. 17.
(Court Seal)
MARYANNS MORIS
tfte A January A MM
Cterk H tea Circuit Court
OEZ-111
By:JaneB.Jeaowlc
Aa Deputy Cterk

J E A N L E V A , FO X W O O D
COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION,
IN C . and------------ . an unknown
person In petMMlon at tea
sublect real preporty,
Defendant!*).
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE II HBRBBV OIVEN
pureuanttea Final Judgment of
rworloxiir* OoteU n*rernSar M.
iff*, and entered in Case No.
fl-M+CA-M-K. H Ma Circuit
Court at tea EIG H TEEN TH
JudU U I OrcuN In and tor IEM INOLE County, Fterlda wbaraln
H O M E U N I T V S A V IN O I
RANK, PaSA te FtotetlN and
JEAN L IV A , H al., are OttonI will tall to tea hlteiaet
*t bidder tor cadi M tha
irant dear at the Courthaute, In Sanford. SEMINOLE
COUNTY, Florida, i t ) ! : «
o’clock AJUL an tea tfte day H
January, Iffl. tea (allowing
dteertood preporty a* PH term
In eald Final JudMwnt. wN:
LH SL FOXWOOO PHASE I,

Ha BIST total I m i

Ltqal N o tlc »

NOTICE OF M LB
NOTICE II HEREBY GIVEN
teH an tea MM day H January,
tm . H 11:10 AXL H tea Watt
Front Deer H tea Mata Courthave* In laniard, Samlnala
County. Flertde, "MARYANNS
MORSE", Clark H tea Circuit
Court, will after ter tala te te*
H public outer*. Ma teltewing
C*Imty?F C rX ,' lnwr*, p*rt£?
lerly described** Mtowt:
H*iItH
LH IS■
and
MThe
rIrrNerM
I 41amM
ta Hi■S---wrngr-a
m
Las M run North atona EaH Itaa
H Oak HIR Orfre talref te Rw
NsrM tide H Mo tubdlvtolan.
thane* EaH 111 teH te Me
W fty
M teH te ttw
Narthaeet earner at L H IA
Mono* Wet! IU taH te te* petal
ptef taereH at recerdad ta Piet
| f * » . Fag* SA H Rw Public
•aeerde H SomtaH* County.
Tbe above tala te made purtuanl to Final Judgment H
Fereclaeure entered In tha
i n ' w /t n i s T w h e r e o f ,

I

. .J P *
* F •*
(SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE
Cterk H Circuit Court
By: JonaS. Joeowtc
OeputyCterk
FjMJwh: DecemberIA v . HM
DBZ-I1S

�Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992 - 7A

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Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992

Health/Fitness
HOUSE CALL
Kidney stones prevalent in southeast

B y A N T H O N Y J . A R C IO L A , M .O.

IN BRIEF
Vitamin reduces risk of birth defects
UOSTON — A major new study buttresses a government
m -om inendntton Hint wom en In their childbearing years take
vitam ins to prevent birth defects.
The study In the New England Jou rn al of Medicine ofTers the
strongest evidence yet that the vitam in folic acid Is a crucial
nutrient for preventing spina htfldn.
While earlier studies have shown that folic acid prevents new
eases ol spina blllda In women who have nlready had babies
with this serious defect, the latest work show s it also Is highly
effeellve for the majority who have never had spina bifida
children.
In Septem ber, the U.S. Public Health Service recommended
that all women capable ol becom ing pregnant take four-tenths
or a milligram of folic acid dally, the amount In an ordinary
m ultivitam in. T hat recom m endation was based In part on an
early look at the study, conducted lit Hungary.
In an editorial In the Journal, I)r. Irwin H. Rosenberg of the
U.S. D epartm ent of Agriculture H um an Nutrition Center on
A giugal Tufts University called the study "n landm ark."
Until now. the strongest evidence that folic acid prevents
birth defects cam e from a study sponsored by the British
Medical Research Council. It found that women who already
bail a child with spina bifida could reduce their risk of
producing a second one with the defeet by 70 percent If they
took the vitam in.
"T h e question Hint rem ained was: Were they an unusual
group? This study answ ers Hint. If given to the population at
large, you reduce the num ber of uctinil tube defects. It’s a very
Im portant observation." said Dr. Mleltnel Katz, vice president
for research at the March ol Dimes.

Rifabutin approved for A ID S patients
WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug A dm inistration
approved the llrst drug to prevent a blood Infection In people
who have advanced AIDS, (lie agency said.
The drug, rifabutin, has been on a fast track through the
agency's approval process, in part herausc It is for AIDS and in
part because Its results have been so positive. Clinical tests
have shown It to be effective In blocking or delaying
M ycobacterium avium complex, or MAC.
"As the Hist product approved lor the prevention of MAC
disease, this drug will provide significant benefits for AIDS
p atients," FDA Com m issioner David Kessler said. “ It's a
welcome addition to the growing num ber of products used to
fight AIDS and diseases that can accom pany It."
MAC can cnusc night sw eats, fatigue, fever, weight loss,
abdom inal pain, severe anem ia and liver dysfunction. The
disease Is caused by bacteria related to the tuberculosis germ.
Researchers have said it occurs In about a quarter of the people
In the Inte stages ot AIDS.
An advisory panel last February recom m ended that the FDA
approve the drug, and the agency moved the following month
to m ake h available to AIDS patients whose immune systems
were severely Impaired.
Early studies of the drug found that It nearly halved the rate
at which AIDS patien ts developed MAC. Clinical trials
eventually weic conducted on 1,100 AIDS patients, the FDA
said.

^Niiliffeeqclrie reduces dlsoMO

... !!

•ROCHESTER. N.Y.
A nasal (lu vaccine given to elderly
n ursing hom e residents along with traditional flu shots
rcdueeil th e'o u tb reak of flu eases by m ore th an half, according
to rcscnrrbers.
The new vaccine 1ms been tested on about 1,600 people

around the country. If it proves successful In more tests. It
could be on Hie market In Hie next three or four years, said Dr.
John J. Trennor. an assistant professor of medicine at the
University ol Rochester.
In Rochester, tin* vaccine was adm inistered by nose drops to
elderly patients In three m using hom es over three years. Half
the 523 put tents were given the traditional llu vaccine and the
new nose drops. The oilier half rerelvcd the shot and placebo
drops.
Of those who received only the shot. 14 percent developed
the llu. Trennor said. Only 5 percent of those who got both the
shot and the nasal vaccine becam e sick.
Trennor said tc se a rrh e is have not tested the effectiveness of
Just the nasal vaccine In elderly patients. But In other studies,
the nasal vaccine used alone effectively produced flu antibodies
In children, lie said
In otherwise healthy adults, the nasal vaccine Is about
equally cl Tec live as the traditional llu shot, he said. "In the
elderly. It looks like right now. the com bination may be the
best way to go."
If Hie nasal vaccine gels federal approval, Wycth*Ayerst will
m arket It. said Audrey Ashby, a spokesw om an for WyethAyersl Laboratories.

Marijuana ingredient O K ’d for A ID S

u n

CHICAGO - A synthetic lorm or the Ingredient In marijuana
that produces Hie high lias won Food and Drug Administration
upprovnl lor use against the wasting effect associated with
AIDS.
Doctors said the drug, called dronabinol, helps overcome
severe nausea and stim ulate the appetite or AIDS paUents. who
often suirer severe weight loss.
The FDA gave Its approval Tuesday to dronabinol, which ia
m arketed by Unlmcd Inc. of Buffalo Drove and Roxane
Laboratories Inc. of Colum bus, Ohio, under the trade name
Marlnol.
Dronublnol Is n synthetic form of THC. or tetrahydrocan­
nabinol, the m ain active ingredient In marijuana and hashish.
Previously, dronabinol's use bad been limited by the FDA to
fighting the nausea experienced by some cancer patients
undergoing chem otherapy.
Marijuana rau u o l be legally dispensed for medicinal use In
the United States
"T here Is widespread agreem ent on Hie positive role that a
nutr itional regim en plays In the health of AIDS patients, and It
is our belief that Marinol. as an appetite stimulant, can be of
greut value." said Scott Hinder. Unlmcd senior vice president
ol sales and m arketing.
T he FDA reviewed dronabinol's effectiveness against wasting
after people with AIDS reported that m arijuana Improved their
appetite, FDA spokesw om an Monica Revellesatd.
Schoolcy said the approval m arks a new openness on the
part ol the FDA In eonsldt ring AIDS treatm ents.

Keep us informed
T he Saiirtm l llt niUI welcomes news und announcem ents of
health Issues, classes uml sem inars available to Hie public.
The following suggestions m e recom m ended to expedite
publication:
All Item s should be typed oi written legibly and Include the
n am e and a daytim e phone num ber ol a person who can be
c o n t a c t e d to answ er a n v q ilt si Ions we might have.
T he deadline foi publication Is noon T hursday before
publication

Over the past 10 years, the
management of kidney stone
disease has changed very signif­
icantly. Our understanding as to
the causes of the disease as well
as treatment options, both medi­
cal and surgical, have changed.
The most recent development
that Is fairly well known is the
use of the "stone bath." The
te c h n ic a l term for th is Is
e x tra c o rp o re a l shock wave
lithotripsy. This device utilizes
electrically generated sound
waves which are then passed
through the body and focused on
the kidney stone, resulting In the
stone fragmentation. The stone
fragments are then passed by
the patient. This procedure Is
typically performed as an out­
patient and most patients return
to work within a very short
period of time.
Most treatment modalities will
relieve the Immediate problem
caused by the kidney stone,
however, the key to ellcctlvc
therapy Is the diagnosis of Hie
reason for the stone and a
subsequent treatment for the
metabolic problem. A llrst time

iT h e management
of kidney stone dis­
ease has changed
very significantly.!
-A n th o n y J . Arciola, M .D.

stone-form er needs evaluation.
These patients carry a 50 per­
cent chance of forming n new
stone within five years. A battery
of laboratory tests on the blood
and urine should Ik* performed
and appropriate X-ray studies
need to tic done.

she may cat.
Urinary tract calculi or stones
Impose a significant burden on
the economy due to the amount
of time lost at work. It also
Imposes increased economic
stress due to the amount of care
Hint these people require.

A dietary history Is also neces­
sary and the patient m ay have to
m ake som e changes In the kind
and quantity of foods that he or

There are several kinds of
stones a stone-former may create
nnd It Is equally tmporinnt for
the urologist as well as the

patient to try and recover any
stones that are passed so that
they can be analyzed. Tills m ay
help In the treatment plan.
Although the met hod of KSWL
as well as ureleroseoplc ex truet l o n of s t o n e s e x i s t
(uretcroscopk: ex tret Ion entails
th e p la c e m e n t of a sm all
operating tnstrumrul Into the
ureter (or drainage tulie of the
kidney) through which various
methods or stone extraction are
perform ed. There arc cases
where It Is necessary for (lie
urologist to perform open sur­
gery on the patient In order to
render Hie patient stone free.
Kidney stone disease Is a
major problem In the smilheast
portion of the United Stales.
Good hydration or taking lit
plenty of fluids and a moderate
diet to advised. If you (lilnk you
have kidney stones, please con­
tact your family physician or
your urologist for furl her Infor­
mation.
Anthony J. Arciola. M.O. I* a urotoglit at
Tha Urology Cantor, l«M Madltal Plata Dr .
Sulla 101, in Sanford.
Tha haalth column I* provided at a
community aarvlca by tha Samlnota County
Modleal Sociaty. Inqulrlat may ba directed to
Ihomodlcai toclely.

Doctors say chickenpox drug rarely used
By CUFF EDWARDS
Associated PreBS Writer_________

CHICAGO — A drug approved
by the federal governm ent Ibis
ycur to treat chickenpox isn't
needed In most cases berauso
the disease Is so mild, a pediatri­
cians' group says.
Four million youngsters get
chickenpox each year, but only a
few sutler com plications, and the
disease kills few er titan 100
children with no other apparent
ailm ents annually, the American
Academy of Pediatrics reported
Sunday.
The academ y said the drug
ucyclovlr oilers only marginal
b e n e f i t s to c h i l d r e n w ith
chickenpox and In most cases
Isn't w orth the tim e am) money
Involved In getting a prescrip­
tion..
Two pediatricians not associ­
ated with the academ y's opinion
agreed. The d ru g 's m aker. Bur­
roughs Wellcome Co., did not.
"B ecause of the impossibility
of p red ictin g w ho will -have
serious disease and who will not.
It is a well-established m odern

m edical pediatric practice to
tr e a t a n d v a c c i n a t e m a n y
children lor certain diseases."
sp okesw om an K athy B artlett
said.
C hickenpox u su a lly m ak es
children sick lor several days
with a rash on the trunk, arm s
am i face, and possibly a mild
lever. Adults often gel m uch
sicker, and some children may
suiter com plications because of
Impaired Im m une system s that
m ake them especially vulnera­
ble.
Varicella zoster virus, which
causes chickenpox. also causes
shingles In adults.
The •l5.(KX) tneiiilier academ y,
based In suburban Elk Grove
Village, said physicians should
use acyclovir for chickenpox
patients older than 12 who arc
.not pregnant and those with
Impaired im m une system s
The U.S. Food and Drug Ad­
m inistration approved acyclovir
in F e b r u a r y lo r t r e a t i n g
c h ic k e n p o x a l t e r r e s e a r c h
s h o w e d th e d r u g , so ld a s
Zovirax, can hasten recovery bv

about a day and relieve som e
sym ptom s.
The FDA authorized acyclovir
several years ago for treating
genital herpes, which aflllcts 3
million to 20 million A m ericans
a n d 'I s caused by n virus very
s im ila r to th e o n e c a u s in g
chickenpox.

Burroughs

Wellcome

e stim ates treating chickenpox
w ith acyclovir can save th e
econom y $400 million annually,
m ainly by getting parents back
to work faster by lessening the
lim e they m ust care for their
sick children.
But th e p e d ia tric ia n s say
treating 4 million people yearly
will cost $200 million to $312
million, given an Individual drug
cost of $50 to $78. depending nil
Hie size, weight nod location ol
Hie patient.
Added to that would he «m
estim ated $30 per patient to visit
the doctor to get a prescription,
said Jo h n Modlln. professor of
p e d ia tr ic s a n d m e d ic in e at
D artm outh Medical School, who
w as not associated w ith the
academ y statem ent.

M any form s of arthritis
can be cured at hom e
NEW YORK - Arthritis strikes
one out of every seven Ameri­
cans, bu t It's not Just one
disease.
The most common form Is
osteoarthritis, a deterioration of
the rubber-like cartilage that
acta as a shock absorber be­
tween the bones in weight­
bearing Joints, such as the
knees. It to a common ailment
after age 60.
When the cartilage deterio­
rates, It may get tears. Pain
cornea from bone ru b b in g
against bone.
Rheumatoid arthritis, which
can occur at any age, to caused
by the Immune system attacking
tissue around the Joints, bring­
ing on Inflammation of the
synovium, the lining of the Joint
capsule. This problem may
eventually lead to disease of the
cartilage itself.
Other forma of arthrtUs In­
clude Lyme disease arthritis and
gout, where excess uric acid
accumulates in the Joints and
causes painful swelling.
Anyone who thinks they have
arthritis should aee a doctor
because arthritis can represent a
more serious illness. '
Many forms of arthritis, in­
cluding gout and Lyme arthritis
m ay be c u re d , w h ile th e
s y m p t o m s of o s t e o or
rheumatoid arthritis can be less­
ened with certain mcdtcaUons.
• H om e e x e r c is e r s h a v e
become somewhat of a fad. But If
you are 35 and older, have high
blood pressure or other risk
factors for coronary artery dis­

ease. or back problems, check
your do cto r before g ettin g
started on any exercise program.
If you gel new equipment,
start slowly and make sure you
know how to use the machinery.
Thousands of Americans each
y ear Injure th e m selv e s on
exercise equipment.
Titc notion of "no pain, no
gain" Is not only wrong, but
dangerous. Pain is a signal from
your body that you should never
Ignore.
Before storting a strenuous
routine, always warm up first by
either running slowly In place or
using your machine at a very
slow pace. It also Is a good Idea
to stretch before exercising to
prevent muscle tears.
After exercising, cool down
gradually to avoid any sudden
drop In blood pressure — and
muscle soreness later.
One of the advantages of home
workouts Is that you can read,
watch television or listen to
music while you're at It.
• DIverllculoBis. a common
ailment among people 50 and
older, occurs when pouches
called d iv e rtic u la p ro tru d e
through weak sjiot soft he colon.
But a high fiber diet may help
prevent the condition. With age.
your muscles can weaken and
become less able lo push waste
along. Foods such ntt wheat
bran, whole grain products and
fresh fruits and vegetables help
keep stools soft and easier lo
puss.
If one of the |&gt;ouchcs become
Inllumed and Infected, a condi­
tion known as diverticulitis,
doctors muy recommend a tem­

Need Help With
Consumer Problems? Call:

porary low-fiber diet and pre­
scribe antibiotics.
Once the Inflammation clears,
a high fiber diet can be resumed.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. MJchaal F roadman
It tha Diana and Arthur Sal tar Profauor ot
Carlatrk Madkkna and Diracter ol Oarlatrtct
at Naw York Univartlty Madlcal Cantar.

WE VE G O T
YOU COVERED

SEMINOLE

That could m ean Americans
would pay m ore lor Irealiueitl
Ilian ll thcy skipped It. lie said.
"C hildren whn get ehlekeil|Nix
rarely go to Hu* doctor lieciilise
their p arents already are tamlltai
enough with II In know what to
do." Modlln wild.
Ann M. Arvln. prolessor ol
pediatrics anti inlcnihtology at
S tanford U niversity, said I lie
drug appears to Is* cllccllvc only
If used quickly.
"If you do decide lo treal, tiltd rug h a s to I k * In itia le d wHhltt
Hie llrst 24 hours'* of a rash
appearing, wild Arvln. who look
pari In clinical studies llitaitecd
liy B urroughs Wellcome

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301 W . F k t t S L , Sanford
(407) M i-0 0 0 0

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Hernia repair used to be
considered major surgerybut, no longer.
Today, It can be as simple
as a one-day “walk-in, walk­
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and cost effective.
For a new o r recurrent
hernia, we use a mesh
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Three convenient loca­
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(407) 647-2727.

Treatment You Cmn Trust

(407) 647-2727

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992 - S A

Bush may explain Iran-Contra notes
■ y P IT K Y O S t
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Iran-Contra
prosecutors plan to. question
President Bush and other ad­
ministration officials about why
they failed to turn over relevant
notes the thcn-vlcc president
took six years ago, officials
familiar with the Investigation
say.
Bush, who pardoned former
D e fe n s e ' S e c re ta r y C a s p a r
W einberger and five o th e r
Iran-Contra figures on Christmas
•Eve. began keeping the notes In
November 1986 as the IranContra scandal was erupting,
said the officials, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
The White House didn't tell
Iran-Contra Independent pro­
secutor Lawrence Walsh about
the material until two weeks
ago.
• "There are a lot of questions
and a lot of people to talk to."
one official said Friday.
• In another development. The
Los Angeles Times reported to­
day that three top Democrats.
Including Les Aspln, President­
elect Clinton's choice for defense
secretary, assured Bush weeks
ago that they would support the
•Weinberger pardon.
Aspln and House Speaker
Thomas Foley expressed their
support after an intensive lobby­
ing campaign on Weinberger's
behalf, the newspaper said, ad­
ding that the campaign was led
by Weinberger lawyer Robert S.
Bennett and longtime friend
William P. Clark, Interior secre­
tary In the Reagan administra­
tion.
• The Times, quoting two people
Identified only as familiar with
the lobbying campaign, said the
effort succeeded In gaining
bipartisan congressional support
for the pardon without stressing
that five other former govern‘ment officials also should be
given clemency.
The Times did not reach either
Aspln or Foley for comment.
A third Democrat, Sen. Dennis
DcConcInl of Arizona, told the
■newspaper Friday that he called
Bush without any prompting
from W einberger supporters
'because he thought the IranContra affair "had gone on long

enough." Bush will release his
Iran-Contra notes to the public If
Walsh returns a copy of the
president's earlier Interview with
In v e s tig a to rs , p re s id e n tia l
spokesm an Marlin Fltzwater
said Friday.
"We plan to release them (the
notes) with the testimony given
to the Independent counsel and
Weinberger's notes. We’ve called
for Weinberger to release his
notes. I think he’s agreed to do
that." Fltzwater said In an In­
terview.
"We have nothing to hide.
We'll make all this material
public," he said, adding that he

had "no Idea" what was In the
notes.
In today's editions of The
Washington Post, lawyer James
Brosnahan. who was prosecut*
Ing Weinberger Tor Walsh. Is
quoted as saying a White House
legal ofTlclal notified Walsh’s
office on Dec. 11 of the notes,
"and that they were embar­
that they should have
rassed
been produced before."
Brosnahan said the typed,
dictated notes contained Bush's
"ru m in atio n s about the In­
vestigation and refer to his
disappointm ent that (former
Secretary of State George) Shultz

made his notes available" to
Iran-Contra prosecutors.
Bush has said repeatedly that
he was generally "out of the
loop" on the Iran-Contra Initia­
tive.
Prosecutors had planned to
Interview Bush easier this year,
but put it off until after the Nov.
Selection
Now, Iran-Contra Investigators
"will want to talk to Bush In
detail about these latest mat­
ters," said another official, also
speaking on condition of ano­
nymity.

Harrell ft Beverly

MAGNAVOX

P a n a so n ic

EPSON

Earty Childhood
Dovalopmant Confer
Mote *L Brooks and the First
Impressions Center Teachers
would like to thank

Chris

Cronins of Christo's Restau­
Retho Baker of Sclmens

rant,

Strombcrg-Carlson and em*

Hiebna
Franklin and Jack PhlJpot,
SunBank on First Street, the
Sanford Klwanls Club, Tom
Moore and Sally o f Sunniland
Coip., United Telephone for

iployees (co-workers),

i ' supplying food baskets and
toys, other friends and com­
munity volunteers.
NSW Of AimNwt awe 1ha products m m.s a t a w t selected U r m K ftjn c a c M rx i offering. ( v e t o *
1221W . 7th St.
Sanford
(407)321-0407

m u l i o n , m m o c a * a f f r e all product* may not be s.ariabiaatau Votes II ini any reason m K M r t t t t J M m it out of M odi, m m il o f f * you a fu n d ia c * a 1
'Special Purchase' and "tended Quantity* item t t i n ix te J ) We i n e r t * the rtgN to lend pu'ctvnei to w * (temper customer AN H o r n may not N o d ill items
W i s m x i u a i i your tiusm eu AnduoderiUr-d-ng

w o n

*•lasr m w »wsl* #weaiiw‘.. . *

NW •* Wep#siwwSan

r a w W W W s I S a w s w t ■ a e t a t a y w i ta s y: M c D u H n i l beat An
y o u find * w r ita b le lower pnea Itom any local store, including our ow n o n tha

C o p y rtf* t

�10A - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992

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Sports
IN BR IEF

All-state pigskin picks

LOCALLY

Bush, Pryce, Walraven top county selections

Um pire clin ic planned

F r o m S ta ff, W ir e R e p o r t s

■ n fra n

SANFORD - Tin* Sanlord Officiating Assoctatlmi has scheduled an um pire's ellnle for the
w eekend of Ja n u a ry 9 and H&gt; at San lord Cltv
Hall. 300 N. Park.
The ellnle. whteh will begin at 8 a.in. both
days. Is for anyone Interested In becom ing an
Atnerlean Soil hall Association-certified uinpire.
T he cost Is $20.
For m ore Information. rail Duane l.aldllette.
322-9020. or the Sanlord Reereallon D epart­
m ent. 330-5097.

Racquetball league planned
OVIEDO — The Oviedo Reereallon and Parks
Departm eny Is offering raquethall leagues lor A.
H and C level players beginning in Ja n u a ry .
League play will he on Tuesday. W ednesday and
T hursday evenings.
Registration, whteh will he available lim n
Monday. Decem ber I I. through Monday. J a n u ­
ary -I. Is $20 lor Oviedo city residents and $25
for non-city residents.
For m ore Information contact Cnrv I I.like at
359-5060.

JACKSONVILLE - All Inn one
Sem inole C ounty's six public high
schools were rep resen ted so m e­
w here on the all-slate loolhall team s
released tills weekend by the Flor­
ida Sports W riters Association
Sem inole High School, (lie only
Class 4 A school o| ilie sextet, had
llnee plovers honored while Lake
Brantley. Lake Mary, and Lyman
each had two players nam ed to the
Class 5 A state team s. Lake Howell
was represented on the Class 5A
second team by one player
Oviedo was the only school not to
have a placet selected
I lie only llrsi team pick ol the
group was Lake Biantley linebacker
Daryl Bush, who was nam ed in the
Class 5A first team defensive mill
S ee F o o tb a ll, Pnge 3B

Daryl Bush

Rec basketball
begins season
with 18 teams

Sem inole P O N Y registration
FIVE POINTS — Seminole PONY Haseball will
he registering players lor its spring leagues on
consecutive Saturdays. Ja n u a ry 9 and 10. ai the
Sem inole PONY com plex on State Road •! lit.
Registration, which will he conducted b e­
tween 10 a .m. and 2 p ut. each day. will be
avallahle to players betw een the ages ol 5 and
10. Players m ust be the designated age by Aug.
1. 1993. Proof age Is required tl the pp-.yer Is
new to the league.
The registration fees are. bv league Shetland
(ages 5 and 0) - $35; Pinto |7-H| - $55:
M ustang (9-10) — $60; Bronco (11-12) — $05:
Pony (13-141 — $75: and Colt (15-16) - $75. An
additional fundraiser com m ittm ent ol $24 will
be required at the tim e ol registration on all
registering players.
For m ore Information call 323-5570 and leave
a m essage.

Prom Staff Reports
SANFORD — The Sanford Reereallon D epart­
ment opened Its biggest Youth Basketball League
In several years, m aybe ever, on Saturday'. Dec.
19. witli nine gam es at the Sanford Middle
School Oym atorium
Because ol th r holidays, tin- Junior and senior
boys and girls’ leagues will next play on
Saturday. Ja n . 9. at Sanford Middle School.
"W e had over 70 boys try out lor ttic Junior
boys league." said Sanlord Reereallon D epart­
m ent Supervisor of Athletics Jim Schaefer “ And
we had a good turnout lor the senior boys and
the girls’ leagues also. It was our most successful
tryouts ever.”
Schaefer said that while tilings went well the
first week, there ts still a need lor a couple of
sponsors for Ilie girls' league and at least two
more people to help with the officiating.
"T h e jilaylng facilities are excellent and If we
can llll those two needs (sponsors and referees),
ev ery th in g would be alm ost perfect." said
Schaeffer. "I would also like to personally thank
the sponsors for all of their help In putting the
league together."
The sjm nsor's for this y ear’s team s are Sanford
Paint A Body. Sanford Electric, the Fleet Reserve
L adies A u x iliary. Rich P lan. S an fo rd Ace
Hardware. Sunnlland Corporation. AOK Tires.
ABB Pow er D istribution, A m erican Legion.
C hristo's R estaurant. H ardee's. Calvary Apostolic
Tem ple anti Sanford Antique.

AROUND TH E NATION
Saints, Raiders win
The final NFL weekend started with *New
O rleans beating the New York J e ts 20-0 and the
L.A. R aiders h u rtin g W ash in g to n 's playofl
ch an ces with a final m inute 21-20 victory. For
the Redskins to m ake the playoffs. G reen Hay
(9-7) m ust lose to the M innesota Vikings.
Sanford's Je lf Hlake played in relief for the
J e ts after startin g quarterback Browning Nagle
w as Injured and finished I -for-6 passing.
New O rleans (12-4) will be at hom e next
w eekend for a wild-card playoff gam e against
either Philadelphia or G reen Bay.

Kaleo leads G ray com eback
MONTGOMERY. Ala. - M aryland's Jo h n
Kaleo threw two touchdow n passes. Including
the 18-yarder gam e-w inner to C lctnson's Larry
Ryans with 2:50 rem aining, its the G ray rallied
to a 27-17 win In the Blue-Gray All-Star Classic.
A rkansas linebacker Raylcc Jo h n so n sealed
the victory 27 seconds later when he knocked
the ball from Blue quarterback Alex Van Pelt.
I&gt;lcked it up and ran 40 yards to t he end /.one.
The Blue dom inated the first halt, building a
14-0 lead while outgalulng the Gray 259-100
The Blue finished ahead 372-326.
Kaleo was nam ed Gray MVP. com pleting nine
of 15 passes for 147 yards. Ryans led receivers
w ith four catches for 64 yards.
Indlunu quarterback Trent G reen was Blue
MVP. going eight of 15 lor 99 yards and
directing both scoring drives In the first hall.

AROUND TH E WORLD

When the Central Florida Classic tipped oil last
Saturday. Gainosville-P K Younge and Lake
Brantley weren’t among the favorites, mainly
because of their combined record ol 5 6. But in

FOOTBALL
I p in - WESH 2. NFL. Miami Dolphins at
New England Patriots. (L)
» p in. - WCPX 6. NFL. T a m p a Bay
Buccaneers at Phoenix Cardinals. (L)
C o m p le te lis t in g s o n P a g o 2 8

W ednesday s title game at Oviedo High School,
Israel Wilcox (No. 33) led P.K. Younge to a 72-60
win over Matt Corto (No. 34), Bob Coberly (No.
30) and the Lake Brantley Patriots.

’Hounds after Pizza Hut title
By TO N Y DeSORMIER

Herald Sports Editor
ORLANDO — J u s t how good are the Lyman
G reyhounds?
Ranked No. 2 in the Florida Athletic Coaches
Assocntion Class -I A slate poll, ow ners of an 8-0-2
record and w inners nf tills y ear's Gnldctirod
Rotary tournam ent, the G reyhounds are nil tu a
great start.
But bow good are they?

JUNIOR BOYS
SANFORD ELECTRIC 50
SANFORD PAINT AND BODY 6

Herald Photo by Kenjo Zjbulungt

W here’d they com e from ?

Kansas stuns BYU
HONOLULU — Dan Elchloff kicked a 48-yard
field goal with 2:57 left, capping it 7-m lnulc.
15-play drive th a t gave K ansas a 23-20 victory
over No. 25 Brigham Young in the Aloha Bowl.
The Cougars (8-5) responded by m oving to the
Kansas 35 before a pass by quarterback Tom
Young Wits Intercepted by C harley Bowen.
BYU kicker David Lauder m issed three field
goals, including a 42-yurdcr with 12:49 to play.
Young, a descendant of Brigham Young and
brother of San Francisco 49ers quarterback
Steve Young, w as 15 or 31 for 262 yards and one
touchdown In Ills first start. He was sacked six
tim es, th re e by tac k le D ana S tubblefield,
selected as the g am e's most valuable player.
Kansas (8-4) q u u rtcrb ack C hip H llleary's
1 yard run with 11:26 rem aining and ensuing
2-point conversion run tied the gam e 20-20.
Illlleary com pleted 11 of 23 for 126 yards.

Jason Walraven

Trevor Pryce

They — and most anyone else w ho's interested
— will get a pretty good Indication when they try
to become the first Seminole County team to win
Ilie I4lli annual Pizza Hut Invitational boys'
soccer tournam ent cham pionship Bits week.
Play begins at 11 a.m . Monday at Bishop Moore
High School and at noon at Edgewater High
School.
"We know we're a good team ." said Lyman
coach Rav Sandldge. "O ur challenge is to win the
See S o ccer, P age 3 B

Most Valuable Player Terrence Perkins scored
27 jiolnts and Ihe Sanford Electric team held
Sanford Paint and Body scoreless for three
qu arters In a 50-6 victory.
Perkins got 12 of Ills jioinls in a 20 point third
qu arter as the Electric five built a 42-0 lead. Also
scoring for the w inners were Robert Ham ilton
(eight). Stephen Brown |slx). Fredrick Sijilln (five)
anti Jo h n a th a n Brooks and Bryan Wade (two
points each).
S a n fo rd P a in t a n d B ody MVP A n lw a n
Cassanova counted four points and Cornelius
Carm lchel two.
FLEET RESERVE LADIES AUXILIARY 22
RICH PLAN 20

Ja so n Gill scored eight of Ills game-high nine
l&gt;oints In Ihe second half as the Fleet Reserve
Ladles Auxiliary held ofTRich Plan 22-20.
Ja so n Gill's cITorts earned him Ills (cam 's MVP
honor. Also scoring for the Ladies Auxiliary were

□See B asketball, Page 3B

Do Miami, FSU deserve dyntasy designation?
’Canes rank
among best
By RICK WARNER

AP Football Writer
II Bn* Miami H urricanes win the
S ugar Bowl, they'll he Ihe best team
ol tlie year. But tire they the greatest
college football dynasty ol all tim e?
It's a question with no definitive
answ er, like debating w hether the
1927 Yankees could have beaten
Ihe Big Red Machine or w hether
T erry B rad sh aw 's S leelers were
better than .Joe M ontana's 49crs.
Still. It's a question that will
certainly he asked If top-ranked
Miami beats No. 2 Alabama on New
Y ear's niglit. a victory that would
give the 1lurrteaues
• Five national titles lit 1G years,
the most ever during ifi.it spun, and
three cham pionships m four years,
m atching Notre D am e's teat from
1946-49.
• Two straight national champlousliijis without a loss or tie. last

achieved by Oklahoma 36 years
ago.
• Thirty consecutive victories,
fourth-longest streak since World
W arll.
• Bowl victories In six straight
seasons, one short of the NCAA
record.
• A top three finish In The
Associated Press jmll for the seventh
consecutive season. No other school
lias done it more than five straight
tim es.
T h a t's enough to convince several
longtim e college football w atchers
that Miami is in a class by Itself.
They believe no one else In the
m odern era has dom inated a decade
quite like the H urricanes, not even
the Oklahom a team s that won -17
straight gam es from 1953-57. the
Notre D.imt squads tli.it won four
n a tio n a l e h a tti|)lo n slil|is in the
1940s or tile Alabama team s that
won six titles lit the 1960s and '70s.
"It they win five chumj&gt;loushi|&gt;s
m 10 years. I'd have to say they're
the greatest ever." said Pat Harmon,
historian at the College Football Hall
of Fam e near Cincinnati. "If th a t's
See M iam i, Page 2B

Seminoles
‘a kick’ away
By STEV EN WINE

AP Sports Writer
MIAMI — T hey've never won a
national title, and they won't win
one Bits year. Many proclaim them
the best team In America, but no
trophy or rhani|&gt;lonsliip rings aecom pany the com plim ent.
This season |&gt;rohahlv will end like
too m any others for the Florida
Stale Seminoles. They'll win a howl
gam e to finish 11-1. eupjilng a
cam paign that would be a dream al
m os I s c h o o l s hut m a d d e n s
T alla h a sse e fans intent on the
bottom line, which reads:
No No. 1.
" It's kind ol like. Ho hum . here
we go again."* Florida Shite coach
Bobby Bowden said.
In the final m onth ol the regular
season. Florida State took out Its
frustration on M aryland. Tulane
and Florida, winning by a com bined
184-52 The Sem inoles m ay be

better tliuu ever, but they're still not
national cham ps.
Wags say FSU sta n d s for Finishes
Second U sually, a n d second Is
w here the Sem inoles likely will
wind up If they heat N ebraska In (lie
Orange Bowl on New Y ear's night.
T hey're ranked third now. jioised to
clim b ulicad of the Miaml-Alabama
loser In the Sugar Bowl's national
cham pionship game.
Some say Miami, one win away
from Its fifth title In 10 years, bus
Infill the greatest dynasty ever. If
not for five losses to the I lurrteaues
since 1987. (lie sam e might he said
of Florida Stale.
The difference between the two
program s?
"A kick." Bowden said.
Florida S tate's shot at the national
ehuinpionslfi|&gt; has gone wide right
each of the jiast two years. The
Sem inoles m issed a field goal on the
final play ol consecutive losses to
Miami - 17-16 in 1991 and 19-16
this jiast October.
Those are two ol Florida S tate's
nine losses since '87. Take away
one defeat each season — six were
See FSU, Page 2B

t

�S T A T S

&amp;

S T A N D I N G S

" " "
.
.
, 001 a
I don’t know what Is."
com m entator . Beano
«*•
.
'
Miami has done Is
■hie,” he said. "If you
me In 1983 that Miami
1h four natlmiai chain■ and the Berlin Wall
m e down m the next 10
$rould have called you

umtudng thing of all," Harmon
said. "They’ve changed coaches
three times, bill they never
.topped winning.’*
. ' The Hurricanes have won 88
percent or their, games (107*13)
.m ce the start of the 1983
*-Mon, Including current wins
nlng streaks or 51 at the Orange
Bowl, 58 over unranked oppon e n ts
and eight over No. 1
teams.
They’ve also played In 10
’ Bowdep, th e m ain straight New Year’s bowls, been
* the .Miami machine, ranked In the AP Top 10 for 119
ta t he Hurricanes at the consecutive weeks, produced
iall-time list.
two of the last seven Helsman
ra as good as any of T r o p h y w i n n e r s ( V l n n y
Id Bowden, whose Flor- Testaverde and Qlno Tonrelta).
■teams have lost seven, nnd had more first-round NKL
aat eight games against draft picks (13) In the last six
Including four defeats years than anyone else.
&gt;ably cost the Semlnolcs
That's a decade-long record no
championships.
other modem team can match,
iarmon. Bowden thinks n o1 Notre Dame under Prank
phenom enal 10-year Leahy. Army under Red Blaik,
been achieved under Oklahoma under Bud Wilkinson
moult conditions than and Barry Swltrer. Ohio State
dynasties. One of the under Woody Hayes, Penn State
:hanges was the llmlla- under Joe Palrmo. Texas under
cholarshlps imposed by Darrell Royal, Southern Cal
A in the early 1970s, a under John McKay or Nebraska
made U harder, for the under Bob Devaney and Tom
s to stockpile talent.
Osborne!
: did .days, coaches like
Comparisons with top teams
rant would sign a kid fram earlier eras, including
from getting Knute Rockne’s Notre Dame
Id Bowden, an Alabama .quads In the 1920s. are almost
ho s ta le d his coaching meaningless because Ihe game
Samford University In wasdrritlcally different then.
* va U1L-.»^aa»m * * e
“ You can’t forget Rocknc.
had better players on though." Cook said. "He won six
tch than some of their national title, from 1919-1930.
is h*d on the Held.
He’s the Thomas Jefferson of
ts in the polls and better co||cgc football."
km also have made it
Miami haa been the Joc’Louls
to win national champl- of college football since 1983.
l *16 undisputed champ who has
0 1968 (except’ 1965). taken on all challengers. Noire
crowned Ibrehatnplon Dame and Florida got so tired of
m*anl lo sing to Miami th a t they
4 win the title, then lose to p p ed playing the Hurricanes.
*1 game • something
-M iam i never ducks any.Qve times be- body.” Cook said. "I think If the
50 and 1964. •
• Washington Redskins called and
1040s. none of the AP a asked for a game, they'd say
ns even played in a yCT&lt;"
Ither did title teams at
How long can Miami stay on
a n S t a t e In 1 9 5 2 . top?
a .in 1996, Auburn in
At long as the Hurricanes keep*
4NotfeDamein 1066.
mining the rich talent pool In
Dame was fantastic in south Florida, they w)ll continue
s, hut they never played to be big winners. But It may get
rL^aald Harmon, who . increasingly difficult to srtn nathose IriMi teams as a ttonal titles after Miami starts
it*rl|i Illinois and Iowa. ptaylng . fuu Blg Kaat schedule
h*
^
next season. Even the best
ton. While Notre Dome tram s rarely Mo unscathed In
40s. Oklahoma in the
v
1 Alabams ln the ’60s
fo r now. though, there’s' nef
won all their champl- rnd in sight.
^ # ! on^ S ! £ h’ l&lt;.la,!l‘
"Their domination has actualt^fra undef threelfad- |y increased the last nve years."
said Jim-Van -Valkenburg. the
*'®hnBO" •*1® Dennis NCAA's director of stsUsUcS. *’l
. j . : j
.
think their biggest problem to
m ay be th e m o st what to do for an encore.’’

lara^Mssii
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by a toul of
17 points — and the Semlnolcs
probably become five-time nattonal champs.
' Instead, they finished second
In 1967! third in ’88 and *89.
then fourth in *90 and *91.
, -M l

{ '

*

,

everything, an
It'shardtoacc
If the Semin
team in the M
best team In
they've lost i
eight to Miami

f

"Maybe coach Bowden isn't
living right, or the players aren't
living right, or Tallahassee isn't
living right," senior safety John

veraity of Miami." Bowden said.
"They’ve always made one more
play than we did. If they're the
best, we surely have to he the

w n w t . k u i •*
t o w u i w is m m .
-,it s j* .i« g g r

subject more

Even if it’s always

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MMMMNM

8anford Hsfald, 8anfofd, Florida - Sunday. Dsoambsr 27, 1982 - SB

Basketball
MNPOAD R1CRIATI0N D lfA B T M IM T

m - 4 ____ a
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V O t I P f R ftW V R K I V f B p t IfT r

Bay, Pa mmfcar^iy

fatten 4 *7 is. 0. BoSSm 0 M X OaawS 1
YOUTH S A IK IT S A L L L IA S U I
Leroy Locked (four).‘Don­
0 1 !. towetl 0 0 « 0. BSwirat I M 4. Brawn 0
so rt
o v a n Daniels (three) and Jarvis ramwa rasesJUNIOR
M
l. RteaaatBBAM. RaStenBMB. telati:
asarui
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C rw naB yttlS. W illm S M O . Hunter BOB m att.
4 tt. t ■ - »
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Slaughter (two each).
RkherSm 0 &lt;H&gt; 0. Cautter S M S . Hunter B Cateary Asaat. Tawtste IB t I t - tt
Marcus Beasley scored nine M
Team tout* — HarSea’t It; Calvary
S AuantOBBB, forry BOSS.Tstata: IB S
Apattellc T emple it. PauteS eut — nene.
points Tor Rich Plan to be named a
His team's MVP. Denis Curry ImM itectrtc IN)
In* IS M V. Break* I M t. SIrISi I I t
added seven and Jerm ain e A fort
WaSa I M t, Hampton 4 M B Reeve* B OB
Macky four for Rich Plan'.
A Brawn 1 04 *. Heat* 0 OS 0 Tstelt: &gt;4 17

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MVP Major Fisher scored eight
or his 13 points In the fourth
u a r t e r a s S a n f o r d A ce
ardware came from behind to
defeat Sunnlland 27*21. *
Ace Hardware trailed I7*IS
entering the fourth quarter but
outscored Sunnlland 12*4 In the
stanza to pull out the win.
Also scoring In double figures
for the winner's was Phillip
Eubanks with 10 points, while
J o h n A d a m e ts a n d J o s h
Murdock added two points each.
Gabriel Cacho was tabbed as
the Sunnlland MVP wllh seven
lnts. with Joe Pcmlcl (six) and
Ike Morley, Harrison Moore.
Undraya Blake and Chris Kllroy
(two points each) also scoring.

a

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14

Christo's Restaurant broke an
8*8 halftime tie as MVP Derrick
Cooper scored three of his
team's nine third quarter points
to build a 17*14 lead. Christo's
then shutout Sanford Antique In
the fourth quarter to preserve
the victory.
Cooper finished the game with
eight points and was helped
offensively by Mike Evans (four).
Reginald Lawson (three) and
Jam es McBride and Ezekiel
Seymore (two points each).
Ricky Butler was tabbed as
Sanford Antique's MVP after
scoring a game-high 10 points.
Jimmy Franklin and Tony Weyh
tallied two points each lor Ban*
ford Antique.

H
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MVP Aaron Thomas and Mike
Vallot Jr. scored 11 points each
as Hardee's used a 17*7 second
half scoring edge to humble
Calvary Apostolic Temple 35* 19.
Also c o n trib u tin g for the
winners were Godfrey Knight
(six). Stephen CArter (four) and
Travis Holley (three).
Lam ell. Faison got the MVP
nod for Calvary Apostolic Tern*.
pie with 10 points, while Kenny
Edwards (four). Darrell Redden
(three) and David Daoud (two)
also scored.

B B 0 •- B
a - at

i i i i m

5 -D A Y K E L L Y
T I R E B L I T Z Ken.

Team tout* - tenters Saint A BaSy •;
tenters Itectrte II. SeuteS oat — nano.
Toctwicale— nano.
Steal Reserve LaSte* AatHtery tttl
Jarvl* d ll B &gt;1 &gt;. Lockett &gt; SB 4. Oantete 1
M L C a ttra lB IM le u B M e rlM tS e rte rO
M S. Daney BM 0. Merrill 0 M A Jaaan OKI I
M t.O w ra e BBSS. Total*: B U I tt.
RtekStealM)
Macky I B-t 4. Jacat t B-t S. OanarS Carry S
OB B. BameaS I M S . Amato S M S . Botetoy i
17 t, Oant* Carry t sa 7, Pawner B A t B.
ASameanBMB.Total*: IB-IBM.
Stoat Be*. LaSte i Aae. 4 t t It - n
RkSStea
B 4 I It - »
Team leal* — S teat Raterve LaSte*
Auelltery 14; Rkti Sian tt. Routes oat —
nano. Tadmicat* — nano.

Tires
KELLY CI TATI ON

"1 Bop't think w ell be
a we win (the- chai
, We have to set our w ,
r. I believe we hove the
to win the chfmp1/M%*hlp
eotnot'a the goal this year."
Iin d ld g i n o n tt w o n t be
easy. Onoe again the Ptsaa Hut

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Team teal* — tenters Ac* liarSoare II;
lannllane t. Seated out — none. Technical*

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McBride I A t t. Evan* I BA A Schleper o
000. Well* # M A Lawton I 11 A Monde; B
M A Barte 0 M A Caeper ] 11 A teymere I
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Battee IA 4 It. Marrle B M A Srllt* 0 M A
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Team teal* — Chrtete'i Rcteaurant 0;
tenters Aetlsuo A

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KnMSt 1 A t A Vattot I t l It .W y n n tM A
H4day t i t A BaRtett 0 M A Bryant B M A
C a rte rtM A Tte m o a a A lll.To la lt: tl Att

KELLY METRIC

49”

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M A Hannan a M A M. B yrS O M A Tatate: I
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Caa I A tt A Ralllm B M A RaBNnt 0 M A
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OaUman’* Oat* B. SauteS eut — None.

M.

in the draw," Sandtdge Bald.
"Clearwater Central
is
always outstanding. Tamps I tin
and
pa-Cham
are
B4B«B Tam
a BBaBiy
w - y B a w iB Bberlain
t e e a swapas
m
mw
flood ^nrog^rama a. Da
D a y to n a
la the
lag Class 3A
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the loot- of four-gam es to

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OWL

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• For ImpoftB, sport aedann
• Wet and dry all-tcaaon grip
• Double teed belted

for Video Vault. Rick Meeks stanza and went on to a 58-21
(four) and Erick Ho and Darwin* victory.
Kevin Brown y u the MVP
Williams (two d e li) alao scored.
with
12 points, while Rod Borwn
A
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11 and Kenneth Moultrie added 10
Richard Reddicks poured In IS points each for the winners. Also
of his game-high 17 points In on contributing were Derrick Jones
18 point fourth quarter aa AOK and Greg Llggon (eight each).
Tires broke a 23-23 Ue after Oreg Reine and Shawn Cannon
three quarters to post the 41*31 (four each) and Deon Davis (two).
Jonathan Solomon scored nine
win.
Reddicks was his team 's MVP. points to earn the Sunnlland
MVP. Ryan Hoe added six points
Walter Qalnefl^ Anthony
FLEET tmaBIVVB SB' &gt;ir.
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' ; points each for Sunnlland*o •' «n
OIRLS
*: 1
outscored Video VauM 19*2 In
Ron Jackson led ABB Power
OOLLM AM t QAL91A
the second quarter and went on Distribution with nine points to
to the easy victory over Video get his team 's MVP honor. Also
Yolanda Cox and game MVP
Vault.
In the scoring column were
AD nine of the fleet’s players Robert Ross. Jerome Williams. Hanedoh Miller combined for 11
■cored with MVP Jam es Young William Wynn and Lloyd Dixon points aa OoUman'B Gala up­
and Mark Watson scoring 12 (four each) and Aaron Robinson. ended Benton's Angels 13*9. *
Cox scored eight and Miller all
point* each to lead the way. The David V. and Jason Compton
three of her points in the fourth
remainder of the scorera were (two each).
quarter aB the winner's bald off a
Chris Footer (eight). Jerem y
challenge. Fellahs Henderson
Whaley (seven), Nick Barnes
scored the other two points for
(tlx). T mI. Davis (five). Tony
Lewis (four). Mike Eason (three)
Rod and Kevin Brown com­ OoUman's Gals.
Benton’B Angels MVP Katrina
and George Baker (two),
bined for IS first quarter points
ach Mich
Each
Michels scored a -game* as the American Legion shutout Southward scored seven points
high 13 points to earn the MVP Sunnlland 19*0 In th e first and Nikki Baker two.
,»r ,
ivi .

(Plssa Hut) champion*
' • ship. Loot year s! this time, our
' challenge was to let everyone
elas know that we were a good
aide, And I thought we dldao,
advancing to the finals and

T ire

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49”

The brockat at
kick off at
Mary ploys Dr. Fldlitpa. Oviedo
and Coconut Creek « B square'
off at E p.m. Winter Park•t 4 p m
tangfoo wttk'
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Ftv

open the tournament a t 11
will play
a t 1 p.m.
on Evans at 1

pjn.

Foptball
mention choices. From Lyman,
running back/defcnslve back
Bobby Washington, the Sanford
P a t r i o t te a m m a t e S e th Herafcl Player of the Year, and
W tepklng was a third-team quarterback Todd Cleveland
were selected. R epresenting
choice as a defensive lineman.
"Daryl has made aome All- Lake Mary ore receiver Pete Kuc
America teams, so I saw that and punter Chad Kessler.
W ashington an d Cleveland
coming." sold Lake Brantley
coach Fred Alman when In­ were the leading rushers and
formed of the selections. "And sco rers In th e c o u n ty th is
Seth made honorable mention os season. Washington rushed for
a Junior loot year, so I thought he 1.047 yards and scared 190
of making It points 117 touchdowns and 10
nod a good chance
chi
extra points. Including two
this year.'
Of the 10 county players who two-point conversions) while
were honored, only two were C le v e la n d h a d 8 8 7 y a r d s
second-team selections: Semi­ rushing and 113 points (18
nole nlarfbtrfcrT Jason Wolraven touchdow na, tw o tw o-point
and Lake Howell defensive end conversions).
Kuc was the county’s top
receiver,
catching 37 pasada for
U* u ^ c i n ,
5
1
9
y
a
rd s and sev en
pforahtchcr In 960110010 County,
touchdowns,
all county
ra tin g 10 extra points and
ling 10 field goals for 40 Kessler punted a count
37 times for a 38.1
.overall.
ven on the Class average.
All but one of the 10 were
•ere thirdGreen (de- first-team choices bn this year's
Sanford Herald All-County team .
Green
was a Sanford Herald
W i c k T " " 3 * P*lktT
The remaining four county s e c o n d -te a m a e le c tlo n a t
linebacker.
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�4B - 8snlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1902

Education
IN B R I E F
Regiacorte wins scholarship
LAKE MARY — Nicholas Michael Regiacorte. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Luigi Regiacorte or Jennifer Court In Lake Mary, has been
selected as a recipient of the Roanoke College and Davis
scholarship.
He was a graduate ofLake Mary High School.
The scholarship is awarded by the Honors Program
Committee from applicants whose qualifications include high
academic achievement, self motivation, and Interest in a broad,
liberal arts education.

Top students named
WINTER SPRINGS — Winter Springs Elementary School
named their students of the month lor the month of December,
recently.
The winners In each grade follow. The students whose
names appear In bold are the Super Students for each grade.
• Kindergarten
B ritta n y D sB srry, Tiffany Jackson. Benjamin Nellson.
Shayna Kaplan. Valerie Maddox and Alex Nee.
•F irst grade
Alios W ltg r ti Mass, Joshua Marshall, Whitney Hyatt.
J
a
s
o
n
Marshall, Elisabeth Akers, Katie Williams. Sean McKee.
• Second grade
M atthew O uglislm slte. Megan Stalvey, Philippe Rodrigues.
Brooke Barker. Jordan Winter. Kenneth Lucas, Kenny
Schmidt.
•T hird grade
Brand— W ilkins, Stacey Stlbich. Brian Corrente, Meghan
Boyce, Ju lie Balagla, Zakartah B enhakum ah. Jessica
Whltener. ,
• Fourth Grade
S tephanie W engenwan, Eric Cain, Kevin Oerrtty. Tristan
Gallagher. Matthew DIBartolo. Jonathan Peel.
•F ifth grade
Mlehael d ead , Jennifer Knoll, Vanessa Cannelino. Jaclyn
Smith, Jennifer Plum, Darrin Shrmrer.
• ESE students
; Kara Ann Stephens. Evan Ulln. Christopher
Whltelev.
Brandon Wilkins was also named the school's student of the
month.

FAME awards pr»— nted
SANFORD — Idyllwllde Elementary School’s fourth graders
Brian McCarter, Tim Calhoun and Jake Robinson
hooorable mention awards In the 1993 Florida
of
Media In r A if iu w (FAME) vtrt** student media festival
Thsea students won first pfitj*T In county and
Ml
competitions for their computer program "Manatees, En-

Nathan nominated for award
SANFORD — Ron Nathaa,; assistant principal at _
Elementary School! tn Sanford, has been nominated
r the
1993 McDonald's NA88P National Aaslata Principal of the Year
The state repr esentatives will be chosen soon with national
recogniton being made In April.

Going
back to
school
ByWIBRIBsSBRi

Hsrakf Staff Writer

SANFORD - HCA Central
Florida Regional Hospital In
Sanford has been working on a
cooperative effort with the.
Foundation for the Advance­
m e n t o f o u r C o m m u n ity
Through Schools (FACTS) to
help teachers advance their de­
grees and to help other school
employees become teachers.
R ecently, th e two groups
combined their efforts and thenresources to afford scholarships,
and grants to nine Seminole
County school employee*.
The scholarships, valued at
9350 apiece, were given to five
teachers from across the school
district.
Four grants were given to
non-lnstructional employees.
The scholarship winners were:
• Jeane Swaynoa of Seminole
High 8cbooi tn Sanford.
•J u d ith Ivey of Loogwood
Elementary School in Long•Evon Lisle of Lake Mary
High School In Lake Mary.
'Mary McDonough of Rock
x Mhfdfr
in Long-

Pine Crest Elementary 8chool

Know Your School:

School shows a lot of
respect for everyone
SANFORD - Tim Seibert
think* that one of the moat
Important elem ents of edu­
cation ha* got to be to
teach the youngster* to
respect one another, the
teacher* and themselves.
Seibert said th a t the
students on his campus are
learning that lesson by the
examples being set by the
faculty and staff at the
school.
"W e a re te a c h in g
e v e r y o n e to r e s p e c t
others," Seibert said. "It is
not a difficult thing to do.
Everyone lust has to be
aware of others and to treat
them with respect."
He said that the attention
given to that one detail has
made all the difference in
the world at the school. He
said th a t th e " h a p p y ,
cheerful" attitude has car­
ried over Into all aspects of
their lives.
He said that student dis­
ciplinary problems have
also decreased dram at-

working on is In the area of
parenL-scliool communica­
tions.
Often, Seibert found that
the parents had no way to
get to the school to paillet­
te in PTA activities or to
ve teacher conferences.
He decided that the best
way to solve that problem
was to bring the school to
the parents.
L ast y ear, he began
having PTA and teacher
m eetings a t a satellite
location in the West San­
ford Boys and Olrls Club on
P ersim m o n A venue In
Sanford.
"We find that so many
parents have wanted to get
In v o lv e d b u t d id n o t
because they did not have
the transportation to get to
the school to do things," be

c

Address: 409 W. 27th 8t.,
Sanford, Florida 32771
Rhone: 322-1711
Principal: Tim Seibert
inrsHment 1,002
Teachers: 57
School opened: 1959
Mascot: Panthers
ic a lly s in c e th e y Im ­
plemented the program.
In addition to stressing
respect, the school is put­
tin g a n e m p h a s is on
communication. One of the
orim arv areas th rv ■re­

The results, he said, have
been pleasing. He noted
that parent participation
up with the

• L y n n K e a to n o r th e
Roaenwald Exceptional Student
Center tn Altamonte Springs.
. T he n o n -ln s tru c tlo n a l
em ployees who w ere given
grants were:
• B e t t y A n n C O te o f
Woodlands Elementary ffehrari
• b a b e l Schnepfof Tui
QcHool in Oviedo
•Pam ela Fowler of
Engllah
— -a -----T 1 iMwm iff
•C ynthia Robtnaon of Pine
C rest Elem entary School In
The HCA-FACTB arhnbrahtp
program w as established in
1991 to encourage school dbtnct employee* to vwtncr tneur
wtion. T* data, ever-ttiOOO
There will be more
o a n . i d , iw w s.

Average SAT score up 100
points at state schools
TALLAHASSEE - The average freshman SAT
a t Florida's nine state universities Is 1,057,
up 100 points from 1900, and 157 points above
the university system's minimum standard.
But the average scare that Florida high-school
let on the Scholastic Aptitude Test Is
i't much of an Issue when the state
Board of Regents raised admission standards in
the lOOOaT The goal was to get high school
tb take a solid
curriculum.
The University of Florida abruptly quit report­
ing freshmen's average SAT scores last year.

vEsathevaaaaad 1,14oT

Istudents were being scared off.
. , —a s would ha too low to be
Ido Florida's largest state university. The
a s 1,153.
i at the Universi­
ty of North fearohna a t Chapel Hill, the University
of T e n s a t Austin, and other top American public
its pick rtMdvntf on the
of SAT
highsci
school grades because they don't
"A t some point, a better SAT or better
‘ does not
vou a better student."
of the University of
you get to the levels we're

n tn w »j«n wfnfr
SANFORD - Kids help­
ing o th e r kids become
winners.
T h at's the philosophy
b e h in d th e C ross-A ge
Tutoring Program that is
being Im p lem e n te d a t
Id y llw lld e E le m e n ta ry
School In Sanford,
The
tge Tutoring
p ro g ra m hoe b een
ibUshed by the
.p a ir of teachers, a t the
Sanford school are con­
ducting a field teat on the
The first graders in Mary
first grade
I getting some help

talking about, there's not much difference."
Lombardi says the SA Ts reliability as an
Indicator of a student's potential plummets
somewhere In the 900s. What tests tike the BAT
measure dependably, he says. Is "the style of
learning" high school students encounter, not
ability to do university work.
At the state's second-largest university, th e '
average freshman SAT score hit 1,093 this year.
It shows Florida State University can compete fer
top students. President Dale Lick said. Bui it also
means the Tallahassee school Is turning away
students it would be proud to have.
"I've taken the SAT three times." said lin e n s
Woodham, a senior at Leon High School la
Tallahassee,
iHet she plant to take It again
next month. •
Woodham has a B average and has made all A'a
this year. But her SAT score Is in the low 900s.
She's afraid khe'U have to go to college out of
Woodham said her brother sailed into
State three years ago with SAT and high school
scores comparable to here.
Though urban public universities are Supposed
to serve local people who can't go away to college,
the SAT score
mt there, too, iw U n f
It
to be admitted than In i * **
In other states.

now antw en NUTRITION at well
%•

»

1-800-538-4585

W
ashington,D
C(202)720-tttt

Monday-Fr10-4 Ea
Hom e economists and registered
dietitians will answer your nutrition
questions about meat and poultry
products and nutrition labeling,
as well as questions about the
safe handling of these foods.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida * Sunday, December 27, 1992 - IB

VVVIOTriWIDWf W
W
PPIW
Bri BCTWWW

Sally Shalbanbargar Oatt), Tharaaa Cokar

Bsst talk on Chriatmaa
SANFORD — The theme for the recent
meeting of Daybreakers Toaatmaatera Club of
Sanford was "Christmas." Sally Sheibenberger
was presented a trophy by Theresa Coker,
Toastmaster of the Day, for the best 2-mlnute
talk on Christmas.
The club meets every second and fourth
Tuesday, at 7:00 a.m. at Christo's In sowntown
Sanford. Visitors are welcome.

Ann Stawart traata bar horaaa Hka children.

A balladna painting la among horaa art In Stewart homo.

X winning combination
Artist trades time between painting, miniature horses
Herald Correspondent

SANFORD - The TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Club No. 79 gathered for their annual
Christmas party at the First Christian Church. A
covered dish dinner was served to 36 members
and guests followed by s gift exchange.
EMBHBjMbWbwBs aravfcfed by Jack, Terry
njMMBfit to Johnnie Futrell in
for her outstanding leadership
during the past year.

SANFORD — Painting Is her first love but her
five miniature horses come a very close second.
Le Ann Stewart, bom In Scottsdale, Arlz.. has
been a resident of Sanford for the past four years.
Le Ann trades her time between her two loves,
her miniature horses and painting. She is a
member of the Orlando Arabian Horse Associa­
tion and the Florida Miniature Horae Club,
She specialises In oil paintings of portraits,
wildlife, landscapes and her favorite subject,
horaas i Although I have been painting many
years my serious painting didn't begin until
about four years ago. Since that time I have been
building a portfolio, exhibiting my paintings in
small or private exhibitions and doing com­
missioned paintings."
"I enjoy attending horse shows and functions

to obtain material and ideas for my paintings," to be my specialty. I am very proud of one of my
she explained. “When I paint, 1 paint, and 1 paintings which I have nam ed "C ountry
connect what I see and then I study my Pleasure." It appeared on the cover of the
photographs. I found It strange that if I study Arabian Express magazine. I have also been
those photographs to try to get a feel for that featured In the 'Arabian Vision' magazine and
horse's personality and then always in my th e ‘Horse and Pony* publication In Florida."
painting I find there is one point where there Is
Horses, In many colors and many breeds, are
such a struggle. It’s like I haven't got It yet."
featured throughout her house. There Is a
m i lA n 't ttell
a i l you
vm i a
v a rv tlu what
au-ltcfe# (I am
an a ttrying
r u l n i f Ito
n
n « U a * i H f t »»i*tk ■
"I ncouldn't
exactly
. reach but my insides know the feeling I am
trying to project out from that painting. From
that point on until 1 get the painting to where 1 frolicking In a field. The paintings are all so
want to-get it frotn.tlw.struggle, and then when I exquisitely done.
"I.did a commission for.Christmas s couple of
-finally■get tt, Mis like. smwnwhat, a timet, I, finally
accompbsh ttbev Sealings1that personality • has years ago. This lady brought in two photos of her
projected to me from its photograph.*';
horse. One was Just of his head and the other was
"It makes me feel good about tt when I feel like this horse Jumping from the side view. 1 wasn't
1 have captured on canvas what that subject Is sure I could do tt and she told me she knew I
projecting. I like to do collective paintings. Two could do it because she had seen my work before.
or three horses on one canvas. Horses Just seem □ Baa A rtist, Fags 6B

Dedication
Book to honor Sheriff Polk
HfBld Corrsspondsnt

Dazzlsr of tho Wook
Hollle Albershardt, an eleventh grader at
Seminole High School, has been selected by the
school's Dazzler Dance Team as Dossier of the
JJoa th.
,, Daughter, of Rebecca AlbershardtTHollle has
been a member of the dance team for two year*.
.She eqjoys modeling, clubs and horseback
riding.
' Hollle said the dance team la a learning
experience and something she will can y with
her all her life, ' i t haa given me dedication...to
find smething and stick with it." she said.
She added,"My goals are to go to college and
.study dance and hopefully returning to Semi­
nole to become the next Mrs. (Maureen) Maguire
(Dazzler dance Instructor) and to teach future
.dancers."
•

SANFORD - Like all little
girls, Cheryl Polk Parker adored
her daddy — so much so, that
she followed him Into law en­
forcement.
"He thrived on law enforce­
ment and serving the communi­
ty." she said. Cheryl had little
Interest in It until she began
w orking w ith th e V ictim 's
Advocacy program following her
divorce, she said, which even­
tually led her to attend the Law
Enforcemnt Academy.
Following her completion of
the courses there, she worked
four years with both the Longwood Police Department and the
S anford A irp o rt A u th o rity .

emulating the goals of her late
father.
John E. Polk began his career
in law enformcemnt with the
Highway Patrol in the weights
division, Cheryl said, where he
worked when she was bom.
When he moved on from there,
he became Sheriff of Seminole
County, a Job he held until his
retirement 22 years later, on
Dec. 31.1990.
“He served a lot of citizens in
Seminole County and
throughout the state, and was
very active In lobbying for laws
both In Washlnton and at the
state level," Cheryl said. He was
also active In the Florida Sher­
iffs' Association and was sup­
portive of many local charities.

The Westbrooks honored on
golden wedding anniversary
Dec. 13. They were each bom In
the New York City area and met
In high school.
On their anniversary, (hey
w ere e n te r ta in e d by th e ir
children at a dinner for 26 at the
Polynesian. Walt Disney World.
Their children and spouses
are: Clint Jr. and Flfl, Orlando:
John and Pam. M l. Dora: Jim
and Laura. Orlando: and their
daughter and husband. Cathy
and Cot Tom Samples, who are
stationed in North Carolina with
the U.8. Air Force. TThere are
seven grandchildren.
The Westbrooks are members
of the Nativity Catholic Church.
Their hobbies are gardening and
travel. In 1991. they flew to

DORIS
DIETRICH
Hawaii for the 50th anniversary
of the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
During this time they met Presi­
dent Orarge Bush.
C ath erin e said she has
belonged to the same bridge club
for 30 years, going back to the
days when she was a Navy wife
and wives played a lot of bridge
in those days.
The W estbrooks' wedding
story dates back to the bombing

of Pearl Harbor and the sinking
of the Arizona on which Clint
was assigned. Later, he was j
assigned to a new ship in tim e;
for the invasion of North Africa. ;
Following World War II, th e'
Westbrooks settled In San Fran- j
cisco with their oldest son,
James. According to Catherine.;
"Homesickness drove us back to \
New York
Their daughter,
Cathy, arrived in 1948. The
Navy recalled Clint in 1950 and
th e y m ad e th e ir hom e In
Newport. R.l.
Another eon, John, was bora
In 1956 followed by the birth of
Clint Jr. In 1957.
The Navy stepped In again,
(his time transferring Clint to
Sanford Naval Air Station in
1960. Clint retired in 1967 and
became Seminole County's civ!)

�D— B — H M B n

—

- Sanford Herald, 8snford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992

Renovated home holds open house

SANFORD — Mike and An- S a n fo rd . S h e is p re s e n tly
nette Mackall of Sanford are em ployed a s a d m in istra tiv e
announcing the engagement of asslstan
their daughter. Michele Lee, to govern it
Gregg Ttaehler, son of Charles
Her fl
and Rose Tlachler of Winter ferson,
Springs.
grandsoi
Born In W inter Park, the
bride-elect Is th e m a te rn al
**
granddaughter of Emory and TXr” 1' ,
Carmen Mueller of Tampa, and iT V r r J
the paternal granddaughter of
Mrs. Edith Lux of Caaaelbeny.
DfM ay5
Miss Mackall la a 1989 gradu- Eastmon
ate of Seminole High School, monte S|

Johnson-Taylor
SANFORD — Jam es and Mary
Johnson of Sanford announce
the engagem ent of their daugh-

ter. Kristina Leigh, to Michael
McArthur Taylor, son of Diane
Taylor of Sanford and Lonnie
Taylor of Kentucky.
Bom in Sanford, the brideelect is the maternal granddaughter of Mrs. Grace Hair of
Orlando and the paternal grandd au g h ter of Mrs. Ella Mae
Johnson of Fredericktown, Mo.
Miss Johnson Is a 1992 graduate of Seminole High School,
Sanford, and la presently atten­
ding Seminole Community College. Sanford.
Her fiance, born In Orlando. Is
the maternal grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Louie D. Bridges of
S a n fo rd a n d th e p a te r n a l
grandson of the late Mr. Gibson
and Mrs. Louisa Tayk*., formerly
(of Kentucky,

TALLAHASSEE — Michele
Diane Crawfocd an d Robert
Charles (Bo) Graham were married Nov. 27, 1992 In a simple,
elegant ceremony performed at
the Klleara United Methodist
Church, Tallahassee,

K S K fifl
■
M
.

■
I

~

Kf

Kftgtfna

m in tin t McArthur Tiytor
seaman In the U.8. Navy curr e a d y * ■rrtn« • bo^
the
.*&gt;1
in f. /-.i w. &lt; .

Robert and Dorothy Crawford of
Tallahassee.
The groom la the eon of Mr*,
Mary f e n Graham of Deltona
and the late Mr. Robert F.
Graham Jr.
The newlyweds are living In

Lloyd's of London In the negotia­
tions, and that be suffered a
heart attack during one trip
which required her mother and
brother to travel there to bring
him home. He refused to be
slowed down, however, and ul­
timately K^onipllthfil his goal
on a later trip.
completed the first two chapters
Cheryl said she remembers
and an optllne of a book about story after story of her Gather’s
her father. She hopes to
experiences which demonstrate
It for sale upon completion, she his love of hands-on law en ­
said, which she expects will be forcement He was as likely a s
within the next yoar.
not to be Involved In a high­
rh ty i
remembers speed pursuit as any officer on
three trips her fhthcr made to his force, she said, and delighted
London, she said, where he in stopping potential violators
helped create the Sheriffs* self- who reacted with threats of
insurance fund for all depart­ calling the sheriff to report him.
ments. She recalls that he stayed
"He thought It was very funny
at Scotland Yard and dealt with to advise them, that he was. In

H '337—

8u,tc 3001 Lon«wood.
.

NOW Y#$T*$ $#nfiC#

The St. John Missionary Bap*
lis t C hurch In v ites you to
worship with them a t their 1992
New Year's Eve service. Special
sermons will be delivered. Music
will be rendered by the choir and
the Rev. Robert Doctor will bring
th e last message before the
ringing In of 1993.
... ,
.
„
H l$ l0 fy $0ffl0$ O ffo fS d
T h e C h ris tia n E d u c a tio n
Committee of Historic St. Jam es
A.M.E. Church will present Its
third program In its monthly
African-American history series
today during the Sunday School
hour, 6:30-10:30a.m.
In keeping with the holiday

season, this m onth's committee
members, Marvin Ellison and
Juanita Papina, have prepared
several activities that will focus
o n K w a n ta a , a n A fric a n American cultural celebration.
After the Invocation and a panel
discussion on "Building Family
Unity" In the community, the
program will continue with the
lighting or the seven candle
candle-holder (klnara) which is
symbolic of the entire Kwanzas
concept.
The closing activity of this
m o n th 's p r e s e n ta tio n w ill
feature the karam u (kaa-ra-moo)
which means feast and will
Include African-American food
for tasting and a brief fashion
show of African attire.

early to 40 families of the West
Sanford Community and the
members of Mt. Sinai Baptist
Church. These families were
donated baskets of food with
turkey, hams and all that makes
a Christmas dinner. Mr. and Mrs.
Charlea Smith contributed a
trailer full of food to the needy
through the Marylln McGee
Foundation, In honor of their
deceased daughter.
Kenny Scrubbs. a member or
Mt. Sinai Baptist Church, works
for the Smiths and helped the
Smiths In their desire to assist
needy families enjoy a happy
and blessed Christmas.
OUTLINES: Shown sitting
awaiting the handing out of the
4 0 food b a s k e ts w ere th e
children of the needy families:
Wesley Delefleld, Jo Bailey
Ryans, Madison Smith. Chad
Rollins. Anthony Stewart. James
Scrubbs. Rebecca Smith. Elliott
Smith. Latressa Haws. Jessica
F is h e r, Lee B a rn e s H aw s.
J e s sic a Fisher, Lee B arnes
Haws, Kenny Scrubbs, the Rev.
Anthony Miller, and the donors
of the food baskets. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith of the Marylln
McGee Foundation.

work on one a couple of hour*
und then I will take a break and
(hen I go to a second one. I can't
work four hours on one because
It in so draining.
An eye-catching painting In
ihc hallway of a lovely ballerina
benl over In a semi-kneeled
position is somewhat out of
context. She explained. "This
one was lute at night. I used to
be a Jewelry designer and I
painted laic in the evenings or
on the weekends. I came home
late that night and it 4ras like
everything fell Into place. I
didn't have to think about any­
thing. Her hair — I Just put paint
on the palette and I went like
that and it was there. I couldn't
believe It. I was astounded what
was coming out. The whole
(tainting was like that. That was
one of the very few that was Just
instant."
The names of Le Ann's other
loves arc Tiffany. Ashley. Marrlssa. Jan n e lte and Pusette.
They are a unique breed of home
railed the American Miniature

—d fr— P*ga 8 $
a n d B etty H im es w ho a re
director and county vet- celebrating their eighth year
service officer. As the e n te rta in in g a t co m m u n ity
s population boomed, the events.
&gt;erations were separatd ..A n extra-special guest was
with CUnt continuing as the Misty, th e w ondr dog, who
veterans’service officer.
*** trtck&gt; to
Catherine went td work for the delight of those present.
Orlando Sentinel In 1963 and K h t f M l a n * h $ l p V W t d y
both retired In 1984.
umhin &gt; &lt;
i
,
kWould Catherine marry Clint SanfordK lw ardsQ ubabanidthe
“ Tinf _
. . . . ^ ... spirit of Christmas with over 600

had a lovely gtft under the tree.
Christmas Day, several KlwaSpecial guests of the afternoon nlans. Including Walt and his
were S an ta an d Mrs. C laus wife. Charlotte. Kelley Mitchell
portrayed by Buddy Sampson and others served lunch to over

fact, the sheriff." Cheryl said.
Cheryl is still Investigating
a, she said.

— M fl

400 newly Goldsboro families at
Rescue Outreach Mission.
E u n l e t a t t e n d s r e u n io n
Eunice Martin, a descendant of
early Swedish settlers, attended
a family reunion this month a t
the home of a niece In Winter

Haven. The gourmet dinner was
prepared by her nieces.
Eunice said 42 members of the
family attended. The youngest
family member is 6 weks old and
theodlest!s92.

knew him, and who have stories
to relate, that I hope they'll
contact me with any anecdotes,"
*hs said. She Is currently heavily
embroiled in research and con­
ducting interviews for the book.

(M sks fo o d on tw o
N «w Y ear' s B a i o ImHo — N ow l)
enfbrmcent and he went way
beyond what a sheriff normally
does," she said. "He m ade* very

Horae.
"T h e h o rses a re like my
children, I Just love them. We
plan to breed them when the
right time comes. Right now we
are looking around for a stud.

A M U -0 8 E» 6TEICMLAW&gt;
Navy A irm an R ecruit An­
derson E. Strickland, eon of Billy
J . Strickland of 2901 S. Sanford
Avc.. Sanford, recently com­
pleted basic training at Recruit
Training Command. Orlando.
During the cycle, recruits arc
taught general military subjects
designed to prepare them for
further academic and an-thc-Job
training In one of the Navy's 85
occupational fields.
. Studies Include seamanship,
close-order drill, naval history
and first aid.
The 1991 graduate of Deltona
High School. Deltona. Joined the
Navy in Ju n e 1992.

1J1■■*

.

O o o d 8am board and eom m lttsa a t open house o a ltb n t l on .

I
■
■

including the Good Samaritan
Home.
Because Sheriff Polk was so
actively Involved In the Uvea of
S e m in o le C o u n ty c ltls e n s ,
Cheryl decided to do something
to preserve both his memory ana

Well, I took on
the Job. 1 worked so hard on that
horse because she wanted an 11
X 14. You had to do details ao I
went In and studied that breed of
horse, the eyes, the head and
everything else trying to get
what looked like this little black
home. She came over and picked
It up a i-ouple of days beforeChristmas."
"When she came in. I was
feeling uncommfortablc about
what Iter reaction would be: she
sinrtcd to water up and she said.
,'Oh. my word, you have got It."’
"This horse had died and there
were no other pkiuiea available.
1 was so happy that I asked her
to call me back and let me know
what her husband said when hr
unwrapped It. She called back
and suld, ‘My husband could not
believe it. That was his horse.' I
felt so good and especially
because I .know how-it feels to
loae something so dear."
"My Ideal is to work on two or
three paintings at a time. I will

The Oood Samaritan Home,
Inc. board of director*, staff and
residents of the home welcomed
the community, to their Open
House celebration last Sunday.
The well-wishers, supporters,
fkmlly members of the residents
were on hand to witness the
Improvements to the home do*
nated by the community. Words
of encouragement and promises
of support were spoken by. Mr.
N dt of the Habitat for Humanity.
Also, words of praise and
blessings were given by Elder H.
Ross. The Oood Sam board
m e m b e r s a t t e n d i n g w e re
William Fraasa, Phyllis Conklin.
Willie Jones. David Brcseler. and
Eartha Melton. Special commit*
tee members were Harry Hagle;
and Seminole County Commis­
sioner Robert S turm . Board
members not attending were
Elease Sanford and Olivia Ayers.
The music for the afternoon
was furnished by the Knight
Sisters of Oviedo. Over 100
com m unity persons attended
and enjoyed the afternoon of
thanks and praise for those who
have made this a banner year for
Oood Sam residents.
B ow l boo h p te n n td
A New Year s Eve Bowl Bash
with proceeds to benefit the
Oood Samaritan Home, Inc. Is
scheduled Dec. 31, a t Land L
Ranch. Heathrow area, 1 p.m. —
1:30 a.m.. Lake Mary Boulevard.
Live bands, volleyball courts,
football fields, carnival rides,
prises to be given away, and
celebrity appearances. Pood will
be available.
A donation of $10 is requested
In advance: at the gate, $12.
Children 12 and under, free.
Unlimited beer and soda. Bring
the family and enjoy the last day
of 1992 together for a fun-filled
day. Help a great cause. Contact
sponsor* Rick o r Dawn at 834*
3755. Make check or money
orders to C8I Inc.. 1900 State

Fed Good, Look Oood
Eat WeU end SUU Lose
Up to 20 Lbs. In 1 Month
• Counseling 0 car* from
registered nurses

There i* this beautiful horse. I
may be able to trade off my
painting for the stud. I hope
everything works out because he
Is beautiful." Le Ann concluded.

ANDREW J . A B A TO
FORT GORDON, August. Ga.
— Pvt. Andrew J . Abato has
graduated from th e com bat

The course provided Instruc­
tion on field wire construction,
troubleshooting field wire lines,
operation of field type switch­
board and frequency modulated
(FM) radio communications and
systems In combat and combat
service support.
He is the grandson of Fannie
O. Beamon of 600 E. 10th St..
Sanford. The private is a 1991
g ra d u ste o f Sem inole High
School. Sanford.

• Medical prescriptions
available

• Nutritionally sound diet
Progrem detail* &amp; price*
quoted oper the phone.

I te u u fH m a tio H A

9«tuuiatlotud

Laka Mary • (Albertson's Cantor)
• 333*0845

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1992 - TB

Reader wants to lick problem
of people spreading germs
K M A B ITi Please comment
on what seems to have become a
national bad habit — people
licking their fingers to turn
pages, pick up papers, open
plastic bags and countless other
dally activities. I have seen
people wet their fingers with
saliva to pick up coins and
before typing on a keyboard!
(I've been grossed out more
times than 1can count.)
Abby, please check with your
medical experts to find out lust
what these people are spreading
with their saliva (colds, herpes,
etc.). Am I being too sensitive, or
are these people truly a health
m enace to them selves and
others? If they are, please print
your reply, as I would like to
send copies to some of the
offenders.
DVCALIFORNIA
DEAR BICKt Moistening one's
finger to turn a page, etc.. Is In
much the same category with
the mom who tastes the soup,
then puts the spoon back Into
the soup. Assuming the soup
taster (or the page turner) doea
not have highly contagious dis­
eases, I wouldn't worry too
much about It.
According to Gary Rlchwald.

dUL
umtiM; In
IWR

ItW B B i |e V » 5 » 3 S

A D V IC E

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

came in and Just fell down hard
onthe couch. He proceeded to
laugh and make a Joke of It when
he discovered that he broke my
couch! The couch was only a
year-and-a-half old, and there
was no reason for him to plop
himself down that hard.

1 asked him to replace the
couch. At first he agreed, then
he changed his mind and said he
had spoken to his lawyer and
was told that he was not reM.D., of the Los Angeles County sponsbtle for replacing It.
Department of Health Services,
moat viruses are too fragile to be
I then, talked to a lawyer
transmitted by people licking myself,
he told me that I had
their fingers before tinning a groundsand
to take the man to small
page or picking up a coin. Cold claims court because guests are
viruses are most easily trans­ responsible for damage, as they
mitted, but even they would are obligated to show reasonable
most likely not be transmitted In care for other people's property.
that way. A vims usually re­
quires a warm, moist surface to
Abby what do you think I
auvlve: and sexually transmitted should
do? Take him to small
viruses require m uch closer claims court
or forget it?
p e rso n a l c o n ta c t th a n th e
TICKED OFF INTI
behavior about which you are
concerned.
DRAM TICKED OPFt Ordi­
‘‘The Chocolate Train" was
ri I am senior narily. I'd advise you to take the name of the play presented
your
lawyer's
advice,
but
If
you
citixen on a fixed Income. Three
by all the students from The Oak
months ago. a friend came for a value your friend's friendship, Tree Private School for their
visit. He weighs more than 300 you would be wise to forget It. parents and Interested guests
pounds. Always before, he has After taking a friend to small this past week. The school
sat down on my couch very claims court, your friendship enrolls 3, 4. 5 and 6-year-old
gently. This time, however, he would be history.
students and has classes from
pre-school through first grade.
The Oak Tree Is owned by Mrs.
Caroline Bistllne. Mrs. Blstllne
and the school staff (she employs
two other teachers) have been
helping to prepare the students
for public school since 1084.
The play was a take-off of the
story “The Little Engine That
Could." The children carried
props, made from cardborad, of
train sections and the play
ended with the train on a candy
cane track taking S anta to
Ms s s m Jiqhl
C andy L and. S a n ta had a
speaking part In the play; how­
ever. Mrs. Blstllne was the naira',
tor for the play. The children
had bells made from egg cartons
a n d s a n g " J i n g l e B e lls " .
" R u d o lp h " , an d "M e rry
Christmas".
eweij dm im p"5t"fr(y
Mrs. Blstllne has a degree In
early childhood development
and has taught In private and
jbllc schools for 40 yean. The
lrst class that Mrs. Blstllne
taught was second grade, having
•••tE iSSL
forty students, at Lyman High
School when grades one through
.twelve were taught a t the school.
«.»*" tWuo** (Wnwy.
The old Lyman High School la
now Mllwee Middle School.
Because of the location of Lyman
High School, near the dog track,
many students came from Cami­
lles that moved often, causing
more difficult.
Mrs. Blstllne took time ofTfrom
te a c h in g to ra ise h e r own
children. Mr. and Mrs. Blache1
IffUM"*'
have four children, two boua and
two girls. However. Mrs. Blstllne
kept her certificate valid and has
!
C*fi
taught at Lake Mary and Lake

Oak Tree students perform
in ‘The Chocolate Train’
are limited to 10 or 12 students.
According to Mrs. Blstllne. the
students are given Individual
attention, lots of Tender Loving
Care, and the students have u
shorter day. The ctasa day in
organized on order for the stu­
dents to have play time, but the
day is stru c tu re d no t regi­
mented. Mrs. Blstllne saus she
enjoys teaching children of the
age group three to six years,
Mary elementary schools. Dur- because the children are so
one of the periods of time responsive.
when Mrs. .Biitline was not
The school was named The
teaching, she also served as a O ak
becau se, located
Dividend at Longwood Elemen­ behindT ree
the
school
Is the largest
tary School. Mrs. Blstllne Is very oak tree in Seminole
County.
active in the Central Florida The spread of the tree
was
Society for Historical Preserva­ measured by the Forestry Serv­
tion, a member of the Women’s
Club and is a charter member of ice.
the South Seminole Hospital
Malibarakl la a SanAuxiliary. Mrs. Blstllne was also fsrd Marald
nominated to Who's Who In
American Education In 1BB1.
90-0780
The classes at The Oak Tree

Innovative
Designs
In V e rtic a ls
ki R
* F ivn iffft Vrnf tea ni waiiy
n awn rml r ai
m

»'0gMKy Workmanship

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IN W IU V A K ,

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Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Sunday, Dacsmbsr 27, 1BS2

by Chic Y ovnf
DONT YOU WANT TO

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by M*rt Walter

B E E T L E B A IL E Y
A5 X LOOK OUT TORAY, X M E
A 6 BA6 OHBQ C AM S O F
BATTLE-REARY TWOOP3

MOICALEHASRSACHIP
A TRRNPY NEW LOW MR

by Art h m m i

T H E BORN LOSER

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^ ITS HARDTO

I NEVER
SA ID A
WORD.

WRITE WITH A
STRAIGHTFACE.

RJNGAT

HUTHCj

D oe.S7. I M I
G e n e ra lly s p e a k in g , you
should be lucky In the year
ahead. However, you are apt lo
be most fortunate In love, which
‘could be the most Important of
all. Times ahead Iqpk promising
for the unattached.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) People who come to you for
help today might receive more
a d v ic e t h a n s u b s t a n t i a l
assistance. Parting with your
resources could be a painful
experience for you. Capric
treat yourself to a birthday gilt.
Send for C aprlcr
apricorn's Astrortlo n flp
Graph predictions
for the year
ahead by mailing 91.25 plus a
long, self-addressed', stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph, d o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 01428,
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19}
You have excellent leadership
qualities which are likely to be
obvious to everyone except
yourself today. U's a shame to
rain on your own parade.
PIBCaS (Feb. 20-March 20)
Feeling sorry for yourself today
la an unproductive use of emo­
tion and energy. If you want to
feel good about yourself, do
things (hat are helpful to others.
AMES (March 21-Aprtl 19) Do
not discuss a matter that you arc
enthusiastic about with a nega­
tive friend today. His or her dartt
perspective could overshadow
your optimism.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
sure you know what you want
today. Otherwise, you may strive
very hard for something only to
discover It provides you with
insignificant gratification when
attained.
OBMim (May 21-Junc 20) If
you lack total falih In your Idcfca
or plana today. It will .be very
difficult for you to gain the
endorsement of others. Believe
In your cause or bow out.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be
realistic regarding what you
expect from others today, or else
you could be severely disap­
pointed. Put yourself In others'
s h o e s to g e t th e p r o p e r
perspectlv
Ivc.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
you
will be supportive of people
p
love today,' yet you might re-

i
II

i

»

1

■pond only in a lukewarm fash­
ion. Go all o u t In stead of
straddling the fence.
VtROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Although you won't try to ne­
glect responsibility today, your
heart won't be completely In
your work. A poor attitude could
produce undesirable results.

too selective. D on't neglect
others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22k
Try not to be overly protective oA
those in your charge today. Yotr^
Intentions will be good, but they
might find the restraints too
restrictive.

(Sept. 23-Oct. 23) At
social gatherings you are the one
who usually knows how to enjoy
yourself and have a good time,
but today you might he a shade

. (fifty. 23-bec.
21) Usually you express yourself
In ways that tend to encourage
others. But today your prais^
and enthusiasm might lack their
customary sincerity.

(March 21-April 10}
You might have to deal with
some uncertainties today., but
Be alert for opportunities in don't let this disturb ydur Mlthc
the year ahead M the realm of spirit Find ways to enjoy your-,
the unusual. Ventures or en­ s V t r r e g a r d l e s s o f t h e r
terprises of this Ilk could provide circumstances.
you with your greatest sueTAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may feel a strong desire to
(Dec. 22-Jan. socialise with friends today. Try
19) Don't be Intimidated by to select a quiet atmosphere,
challenges today, regardless of because although you might
their size or scope. Once you need companionship, you don't
meet them head-on. they could need a loud environment
turn out to be paper dragons.
OBMDfl (May 21-June 20)
Major changes are ahead for You have a subtle, authoritative
Capricorn in the coming year. charisma today. This enviable
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) asset could enable you to take
Try not to be stingy with your command of situations without
resources or possessions today, shaking everyone up.
but. by the same token. If you
CANCSR (June 21-July 22)
have som ething you would Instead of making snap Judg­
rather not la id to a poor risk, ments today, take adequate Ume
say "no."
lo ain through all of the Informa­
m e n (FCb. 20-March 20) tion at your disposal. Each (set
Your leadership qualities will be could be significant in its qwn
evident to your peers today, way.
although you might not re­
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Pro­
cognise them. Don't take a back ceed cautiously If you are re­
seat if they are calling for you up quired to make any financial or
front.
■ G K

»**&gt;! s *t i« l*i« r I

t y T , K 'R y a n

R*

A R L O A N D J A N IS
(jp r w c iE tb P iA iw

r

vl?t,

commercial commitments* fc»
day. Ask lots of questions tfyot*
fo e ^ s rirm ti^ tirs M v W ^
■VIROO.fAug~.B3 N spr.caal
ooc-lo-one basts todays Kindness
“ “ — ^ rs ta n d r
. ____ TT_ih your
LUNlA (Sept,
jecta' where you utilize youi*
imagination and resourcefulness
could prove to be especially!
rewarding for you todfcy. Keep1
your focus on .Creative en®
A rrmrS
. ■*. A+ji
CCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoV. 227
People who Already like you will
be even more enamored todays
because they wilJ see exceptions?
qualities In you that are absent
In others.
&gt;
•AOtTTARIUf (Nov. 23-Dec/
21) It la very Important at this,
Ume that you finalise something*
you recently started before Ink-4
tng on any new endeavors. U*UL
give you gratification to know;
you have finished whXlyoW
started.
f

by

* 0 # 6

tu ffto o

dM M M ^JT

R v ifM -U W fR

iaO A R ^K L fi:

For some momenta, only the
*^bother Anthony, a member of
of the grandfather clock
a silen t order, features oc­
&gt;heard.
c a sio n a lly in D avid B ird 's
The Abbot led the heart .10:
articles about the monks of St.
Titus. He Is an Indulgent person, six, king. ace. The declarer,
but his patience reached break­ Brother Xavier, then took the
ing point when today's deal was n e x t eig h t tric k s with th e
played. Brother Anthony was diamond ace. two diamond ruffs
W hand, the heart queen, the
sitting East,
West, the Abbot, feeling safe spade ace and three spade niffs
because his partner could never In the dummy.
North was on lead, holding two
u tter a hid. opened with a
psychic one du b . However, his diamonds and the A-8 of cuiba.
bid w as o u t o f t u r n . The Bast had hla four trumps. South
tournament director told South retained two hearts ana the 10-8
that tf he opened the bidding. of clubs. On th e lead of a
East would be forced to pass diam o n d . B ro th e r Anthony
could only niff high and play
throughout!
Deciding he had to open to back the d u b king. But the b a d
exact the full penalty. South o f d u m m y ' s l a s t ' d i a m o n d
began with one d u b . North allowed declarer to score hla
club 10 with a coup en passant.
raised to five dubs.
Enough is enough, thought Five d u b s doubled and made,
" W h a t do y o u m e a n b y .
Brother Anthony, looking at nis
22 points. "Double." he said, breaking your vow of silence.
surprised to notice that hla voice Just to double a cold game?"
had broken since he took his demanded the Abbot.
M srr

MAN*

3H

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Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Daoambar 27, 1M2 - SB

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

1 * h 5 w ) T d ORROOORS

L l l H U f Y M AM Hi

a/fc/a
GEORGIAN
CON­
STRUCTION
COMPANYi
IANPORD BUTLERi ALTA
MONTC OARAGE, INC.* and
OAKLAND VILLAGE HOME
OWNER'S
ASSOCIATION.
■u a *

INVtfI "PpflPBUHpJM
•TKWlf
* - « -----

H V IP IB K IT l*

NOTICE OP SALE

PMOT Ntad. MadSI SMj I
MER/M)

I EHctra C1 IME

IN fNB CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNE N TH JUDICIAL

NeVWpNf Maatar, MN«I

71— HalpWaatad
SEMINOLE COUNTY

rounac
Victim AdmcaM In Criminal
Jmtica tratam, D ayw or
K ip rltA C f ropdrad. Sand
■ raauma Mi Blind B w N.
Sanlord HoraUL PO Baa MW.
tantard, El. SOTS-MW

C M M M E l i tf-MM-CA-IMC
In OrcvH Cw rt P M
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JanM
Intnl
laI O
aw
*—
vIN
PV
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PPJiO*In

Samlaala Cawntp, Florida.
•HwMBCALVWT.RU LAM * N

LIVE MUSIC, varurtiN i man
band. Partial, wtddlnfi.
club*. Lila rack, blaat.

M a n M o il A l l BBaW
w a v^v.-V
l l a- i t a L n ^i 'k--^E^BMM

and H. BRAXTON O R IB N ,
J R - a/k/a HUOH BRAXTON
• M I N , JR.. « M BRBNOA
JOB ORIBN. t o MM. am Mb
OoMndant*. I. M ARVAN N I
WORM. CNN* at Bn abwaanRMad ta u t. Un N wR M Mb
C M C m Nwnbar: H M U C A
M O M Ma iNMNM^JaMMaJ

CauntV. Plarida. wkaraln
THOMAS A. JUSTICE and
RICHARD S. TAYLOR, JR. am
PiaWtWN. and REESE GROUP.
INC. and ROBBIB REESE, tndbrldaally* STATE OP FLOR­
IDA. DEPARTMRNT OP
RIVENUEi A. RAINALOI
PLUMBINO. INC. l/k/a
RAINALOI PLUMBINO. INC.*
OLVNN M. OOUOHTV*

?&amp;££££5
S/'auSHSS
OB COMPANY
WEST BURLINGTON, IOWA
OS's Bwttehgaar Manufacturing facility,
located In W. Burlington, Iowa
la staking to AH tha following Job opportunist*:

Requisition Englnoora
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i A

GENERAL A

ELECTRIC

AN EQUAL OPPORTUPTY BPPLOVBt

I ';

�J

100 - Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Sunday, D«cemb«r 27, 1902

71-H tlp Wnttd

K I T 'N ' C A R LY LE® by Larry Wright

71-H tlp Wanted

114—W a rth o w t

f/1

PACKERS

Dentil Assistant
Dynamic sell starter needed
lor comprehensive Implant
and reconstructive practice.
Strong general denial and
surgical background a must.
Available Jan. 4. Salary and
benefits commensurate with
experience. 441-4441 er
404 773-4304

14 JO p e r h o u r . L ( k e
Mary/Sxntord ore*. Need I
dependable people lor great
opportunity with growing
company. Long term. No let.
Trent w rId (tatting, M 4W II

Uc Retldenllal Journeyman
Elecllclant need only apply
JaMerd Electric.........1111141

Exp. Cooks
Cheerleader-Type
Servers

Salesperson
Electronic A Appliance E«pe
rience Required. Pull lime.
Salary plut com m lttlon.
Room lor advancement, ma
|or medical benefits. Apply In
perton:

Apply In Perton: CraiyWIrtgt.
1544 S. French. 110 1IIJ______

BINDERY H E LF WANTED
Days and nights. Exp. prt
(erred but will train. Apply:
757 N. Hwy 17 47, Long wood

Exp. Electronic Tech

Dental Receptionist
Experienced, energetic Indl
vidua!, with strong denial
background, lor comprehen
s lv e s u r g ic a l and r e ­
c o n s tru c tiv e p ra c tic e .
Scheduling. Insurance. II
nanclals. and patient relations
a must Computer a plus.
Salary and benefits common
curate with experience.
4W 4444 »T 444 775-41W

Security Officers
Pari lima. Rlvercretl Securl
ty. U H Ramlblng River Or
m 5770

Musi have 3 yrt COMMER
CIAL exp A transportation
Turt Masters............. .330 1441

CHILDCARE Center. Exp. A
Early childhood Ed. A MUST.
Call Rente:................ 3714443

DRIVERS NEEDED
AG C A R R IE R S , a well
•siabllihed end growing
central Florida based com­
pany oilers you:
• Semi Annual Pay Increases
• Slop Oil Pay
• Unloading Pay
•Vacation Pay
• Salely Bonus
• Spouse Riding Program
• Average Trip 5 7 Days
• Late Model Conventional
Tractors
If you have 1 years tractor
trailer, OTR end snow end Ice
experience plus a good driving
record, cell!
IW 4474 4454

A LTA M O N TI,
Quiet area. 1710 per month.
t&gt;S»wcurtty.M M ltt

SECURITY
Part lima. Sun. Thurs. Nights.
Sanlord. Area. Llcenta pro
tarred 1 407 347 5757 Lv. msg.
Experienced. rooting related
Drivers license required. Call
(407144( 0154

LAWN MAINTENANCE

DIRECTOR

m u u t+ rtm ,

1440 S. French Ave., laniard

Highly motivated Technician
or Engineer with a minimum
ol J yrt experience In Scat
and Installation. Call ICRS
I W* 004 4441_______________
HAPPY ELVES Childcare Ctr..
Lake Mary needs organlted
Eiperlenced Cara-ghrer. At
ternoon hours. Ml 2344
LADY 50 ♦ to live In w/elderly
lady. Free rent end util, plut
small salary. Ret s 311 4757

Musi have truck or van. 1300
lo WOOper week. Call MO 4711

LA ROE OLD COUNTRY

FARMERS FURNITURE -

On StrombEif Cartson Sirs.

• CARPET Ck(nin| TECH .

ty.Caiim-trwer w -tm

tV U m X
c leWbyM* etc

1 bdrm., I hath. New carpet A
paint. Family rm „ appliances,
garage. UJO/mo. C iK e ill

TAX PREPARER REEDED

^JjeralNceuniljlllTOJ^

15 years exp. Send resume to:
3l3Dlrkxen Dr. Suite Dl
OoBery. F|. 31711
TEA C H ER S
) Pro Kin
dergarten. lull time and t part
time permananent lor after
noon cart. M F. Exp necet
sary. Must be neat end orga
nlred. 314 4333 or 331-4413

S4W/mo plut security. 1131037

MEDICALRCCCrTIONIST
For busy orthopedic oil Ices
Call Sharon. 747-5535

plus dsposlt

To S4 hr. plus bonus. Expert
•nee preferred, but not necet
sary. Many positions avail­
able....................... 407-44(4444

tennis ct.. alt apple., wash
dryer. U1J ma. S M tec.
•SANFORD. S/t duplei. with
parape, CHA. Ip. rm s , itra
sterape. (440 mo. + 4300 sac.

Telephone Sales

Fee, BBC Mgmnl. 4440071

Incoming, outgoing. 4400 WOO
per wk. Call Judy: 4074441713

TERMITETECHAICIAA
Experienced preferred but
will train. Call 313 M il

G A R A G E SALE
G U ID ELIN ES

Special, SHi/mt. 3311554
SANFORD. Office space, 5400
tq. tl. building total. 1100 sq.

373 0047 or441(151___________
WAREHOUSE AND O IN IR A L
LABOR M I L F N I I D I D I
Bonus lor drivers. All shuts
ivalloble. Dolly pay. no toe.
• Report ready to work S:30 am.
Industrial Labor Svc.. 1011
French Av. No Rhone calls

SANFORD • t room efficiency
plus private bath. Complete
privacy. (71 per week plus
ItM security Includes utilities.
_________Call 3131144
SANFORD . • &gt; bdrm. house,
complete privacy. I Mach
from new hosphal. si 10 per
week plus 1350 security.
Coll 333 1344

central M/A. waeher/Pryer
hoo'. ups. 1435/me plus securl
ty.Hall Realty,3315774

• S A N F O R D . S/t Dupla*
w/Oarape. scm. patio. CHA,
all a n il, saw ma. S4» tac.
• O I B A R Y . t/t w/carpert.
workshop, scm. perch. CHA.
tg.yd..S(M m a.tlSliac.
• LK. MARY, l/| w/carpart,
outside sterape. comer let.
New point A carpet. Cleon.
(440 me. SaOOtec

• M A Y F A I R VILLAS, t/t,
Frlvatel dbi. garage, all
•p p le .. o u t e i d o Ratio
w/prlvocy, Ip. rms. (P S mo.

SOWSac.

ft—Apartment*

I |w |||a w iA K A ^

aw
WviivTitTov^RI f MRVf
§

CMitry LakeApis.
CheekList
wash dryer. Quiet Ott Lk.
Mary Blvd. S75 wk. 3301744

✓ Newly remodeled apta.
✓ One and two bedroom
'✓ Ask about our 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 month leases
✓ C16se to mqfor hwys.
and thoroughfares

Houteprlvl tapes.........311-43(1

2714 Ridgewood Ave
Sanford
330-5204

5
OH

A n d O ur Speolal Offer
Will Have You Laughing
All The W ay To The Bank.

Coevilla Apartments
Newly Renovated!

V

This It ■ grttt opportunity for you to tnioy tho tame groat results at
our regular claaalfied cuatomara at no coat to you. Juat follow theaa
| In a tr u c llo n a .
1.

.

Ada will ba achaduled to run for 10 daya.

2. Prio# of Item must be stated In the ad and be 9100 or leta.

3. Only 1 1tem per ad and 1 ad par household per week.
4. You should call and cancel at toon aa Item sella.
5. Avallabla to Individuals (non Commercial) only. Dots not
apply to rantala or garags A yard salsa.
6. The ad must.be on the form shown below and either be
mailed In or presented In person fully prepared to the
Sanford Herald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start aa soon as possible.
8. Classified Managements decision on copy acceptability will
ba final.
D B O SwvWw.TWdBtt

MAIL TO:

K

8«nlord Horald n v

P.O.BOX1SI7 s i l l

Sanford, PL SI77S1M7
4 ONLY ONI ITKM

4 (BURT N

M A tTB R BLSCTRICiAN—
RoWRnllpI or Commercial

U W U U L U flU T H IH
RemeReHna A N4w cwwhvcsw.NaaftNF— JNINi
KAMI

TO VIM

IV M C

t -&lt;T2 ' JK*

______________

■ ’

IN*

477AW4

fr w s tr v tc R 1

• ISM ON U M

PRINT AO H M t

j

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, December 27, 1W2

-ill

235— Truck*/

Butt* / Van*

LK. M ART, 1/7, family rm, new
kitchen, CH/CA, on large lot.
SWMO............W. Malktewtkl
WeeWer.......................W - m i
LONOWOOD - 4/1 w/poo). fplc:

FHA O R V A AS LOW AS*%
G ov’ l Foreclosuret. Re
pos/Astume No Q uality
Homesl Owner financing.
Seminole. Orenge. Volusia.

Sanferd less than SJ.Mt dawn
aPtnecrsst - renovated, carpel,
appliances, fenced yd &lt;4S,fOO
eRenovated like new 1/1, Iplc.,
appl.. new pa Int. S50.100
• Real Hamel In cul de sac. 1/7.
renovated Garage. $4*.*00
• 1/1 an Is acre. I7M sq. It, Iplc.
appl., dead end street 15*000
Assume Ne Qualifies!
•1/1 an 1/1 acral Fenced, cul de
sac. dead end street. S44.S00
Additional homes avail. Less
than S7K down!
PAOLA. 4/7 on on 7.14 acres.
Pasture with stable. Sttt.SOO

Loan's of properties
All types, areas, prices
Catllec FR EE LIST

ENJOY TH E COUNTRY A T ­
MOSPHERE ottered by this 3
bdrm. 7 bath w/femlly rm on
almost 177 acral Raised polio
ovtffoaksoaksl............. 53.500
LAKE MARY 1 bdrm 1 bath
w/famlty loom, control M/A,
lanced yard, forage, walk to
golf course. Ml.fOO Owner
financing with &lt;11.000down.

BANK REPOS

1 and 4 bdrm. hemes available
In Seminole and Volusia
Counties. NO DOWNPAY
M E N T TO Q U A L IF IE D
BUYERS! INTEREST RATE
A T 7.51% FIXED. Gov'l re
p o t. bank foreclosures,
assume no quality mortgages!
Low monthly. Call lor detaiisl

jMNt MsnsflttS, 323-7271

G ’n * ifK

NEWWm ism i Homos S4S-70K
+ Land. All sltawork Incl.
Build on your lot or any lot In
Seminole Co. Superior quality.
1 X 4 walls, dbl. payne win
dows. Modal open Hwy *7
Deland. CaW ..-.l&lt;t4 K t l &lt;4M

W/&lt;5.000 down. &lt;414 at mo tor
70 years. 1 bdrm.. 1 bath.
Garage. CHA i4f.000 .173 4747
SAN FOR D . Sanlanla Sub ,
S3.MO total down II qualified.
&lt;4es/mo. 1 bdrm.. remodeled.
tae.SOOOwner Broker***0141
SANFORD - 11.000 plus closing
moves you In I Owner I Inane
Ing. 1 bdrm,
completely
renovated, new root, doors,
window, deck, carpet, counter
tope. etc. Central air. Includes
ad|ecent lot Only $57.0001
Inverters Realty. 774-5415

____

m i n i ________

e*t M U STA N G Hatchback,
Aula. AC, LOAD ED ! Low
7.000 ml. Eslate car. 17700.
373 $014___________________ ,

eR EN AU LT Alliance. 1*05. AC.
power steering, am/lm, 4 dr.
SISOS. 771 4547or UIMOO.

233— Auto Parts
/Accessaries

O C A L A N A T 'L F O R I S T .
Weeded letsl SS.fSO each, no
money down I S7I.4I monthly.
________ I &lt;00 X7 5074________
O V I I O O O I N K V A

S I 35
ORLANDO - Pymbersken On,
The Lake 7/1. nice carpeting,
range, retrlg, air, pool. ate.
S34.M0; W INTER SPRINGS 4
faptfee t/h kitchen'ygvipped,

23S—T ru ck s/
B u sts/V a n s

Cwrttsy1&gt;mSCats, 321-2123
with *n Bulck 1J V-* engine
Holley 4 barrel. SI,750 171HOP

• AIRBOAT. 10II. Grasshopper.
140 HP, I,yearning new mags.
7 props, Iralltr SI,500 Call
______
171 5401or 177 7170
• BASS BOAT, IPV4 15 tl. 40HP
Mercury, trolling motor, Irall
er, extras, good (ond &lt;7150

tires &lt; m Car Craty, 404 5441

• FORD RIM A L T 10. 4 wd, 4
eyl., 44X ml., new liras, eat.
warranty, ItOJM 1*4 41**
ORD RANGER X L T
IWO.
longbed, loaded I A/C, lew
mites, gray w/red plnslrlpe.
red interior, durabed liner,
custom rims, &lt;4,5001717415

Warranty. &lt;11,

marblelika, auto timer+ |ets,
w/wood cab &lt;1000. OBO taka
paymenls/cash. 311 m o

can............................ MIAMI
• COBRA FISH *N SKI tl. IS
It, scan a. ISO HP outboard
w/less than 70 hours, many
•■Iras. Purchased new In 4/S7
Take over payments ol
1707/mo &lt;47 4700. Joe_______

• SKEETER bass boat, isat,
Mercury 115, Sl.ttl. 17 It.
Starcrett. &lt;5 HP Evlnrude,
SI.4S5; 4SHP Evlnrude. &lt;400;
Call 1717440________

• M O V ! RIGHT INI 5/1 W/now
paint, now carpal, now rang#
A dish washer! ppiit plan, Ig.
let an cul da sacl.........&lt;41,5001

tor appointment

S4 7M 0

VI m S
Is on.* beautifully
sertf. porch, high
floor plan.

..........................—

—

• OIRTBIKB, M RM 111. runs
eec., looks esc. Only S*oo;
MQ57K

241— Recreational
VthldGG/ Campers
OVERLAND I T . 14 II., mint
condition, LOADED. I4K mi.
155.000......................... 14**044
■ IfM T IR R Y M ft.. Slaapi 4.
w/ awning, eecallanl condi
lion. SIIMO. M4 511 Sill

We Make It!

044 S K E E TE R Tournament
Bast Boal. Merc XR7 150.
w/cever.e&gt;c cond &lt;4400
1771540_________

• BUICK LESABRK CLASSIC
IS44. runs good, &lt;1100OBO
_____
Call 177 7454_______

TME UP PAYMENTS
M0MONEY DOWN
E icept lei, lag. title, etc.

1SS1 OELTAOB ROYAL Auto,

Call In your garage sale ad by
17 noon on Tuesday and take
advantage ot our special
garage sale ad prlcall Call
Classified now lor detaiisl

322-lilt

air, tilt wheel, cruise, power
windows, air beg. power
locks. AM FM cassette, rear
delrost. ONLY S740SI par
month............Call Mr. Payne

CbrcMb i Uw&lt; Cars, 113-1123

K vormI? lonkreyt?

m C A N H f LPI
;.

'.7

*'

f

BUY HERE
I BDRM. 17X50 mobile home In
Carriage Cove. &lt;1.500 174 57**

23»— Motorcycles^

230— Antique/Classlc

'-It l O ' i o R

mobile homesl 14X70 SllO/mo.
14X70, &lt;17i/mo. 141570*
1*7* PARK Medal, turn.. 11X15,
w/encl. FL rm. lOXJB. all tic .
cond. Mutt see la appreciate I
11 Oaks Campground. Ready
to move Ini &lt;11.500. m 17*7

1*07 J E E P O R A N O
WAOONSER
trai l er
package, air. Priced la Mill
_________Call 177 41&lt;7
*1*71 C H IV Y 1/1 Ten pick up
Runs and looks good! Sit*!
171 547*_______ ________
IfU FORD Van 14 pass.. Beige
In /out, AM FM, lint, no body
work needed, asking 11000
Call Owena l«lM * U
'
• 71 CHEVY Hvy. duly pick up
400 cu. In.. 1 sp. auto, no body
U &gt; } 177 4HI

We Don't Meet The Competition

/

•A FIND M The "F a rfc r I l/ l
Immaculate In mobile com
munity. En|oy pools, spa,
tennis, crafts I +■More.i45.000.

§ Surfed Motor Co.

end Blkts

•BABY STROLLER ■ Nl
stroll a bed type S41177 47H
• BAR B QUE O R ILL closing
lid lype on rolling stand with
side table. S45173 MfO_______
• FOOD PROCESSOR plus
blender, GE, like new, with
book Cm I &lt;117, sail tor &lt;50
OBOCall 10AM 5PM, 1101040

•OUUGESAIEADMR6AIN

O R N IV A - Cute 1 bdrm. t bath
In town, tiled lemtly room,
new root/carpel)' &lt;44,*00
1 5401117, leave message

;

Comp/Caillsionfull cov. avail.
ECONOMY INSURANCE
IMS. HWY.17S7.

A Happy Christmas l
AND Merry New Year 17 U
Hueys Crown Pawn........777*744

Inlesllnal/estrrnal parasites
ELIZA B ETH BAUGH • Dog
training! 75 yrs. e«p! Private
or Group, Call 171 5145 ____
N EED responsible person to
babysit, your home, small
housebroken doq lor 1 mo
while owner's away. 4*4 0544

217—Oarage Salts

153— AcreageLots/Sale

realty, in c

•iff— P it » * suppHti

AA Cantos. Inc.. D M t H

323-5774

STENSTROM

Dally. Mar iweal her Farms,
MSI Celery Ave CR4I5.
SWEET PINEAPPLE Orangesl
Only 17 a bethel I
Call M l SIN

♦ * AUTOINSUMNCE* *
PIP/fD |50 Oder

Ashing &lt;1,000177 7704/777 &gt;744

DwfWf FiMRCiR|
321-0759

m t*s*_________ ____

Realty. m * li7 / m M M

la Th* Cauntryl 1/1 brick home
on I/] acre, new paint and
carpel, lanced yard S77.500
Lk. Mary custom built I 'l , 1 car
Oarage Llv. din. lam. rm*
Fireplace, sec. System. S45.500
Lk. Mary renovated like new
1/1. garage, lanced yd. UT.SOO

• LAWN MOWER, Sell pro
pelted, 17 In cut Oyna Mark
l i HP B rins A Stratton MO

^

W-&gt;1 ■

S

i t if if i t i t i t

M Y HERE
LOW CASH DOWN
LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS

1tf~PMP&lt;GM ter Salt
SANFORD,'OUPLIX - I bdrm
each, good neighborhood.
U*,*0* Will finance.
Call 407 S74 &lt;044

• FANTASTIC 4/1

J'lli

BDRM, SITS, Child* trundle,
w/ehelvus, dresser w/mirror,
hd. beard, chast. 171-4154
•

IJlIl)

• COFFEE tail* and matching
and tables*. Uleech 177 &lt;744
O A V R ID W H ITE Iron and
braw. ortho mattfM*. new
still In wrapper, end, pep up
trundle. Wat MOO. Sacrifice
MM. 1110*11_______________

• DISHWASHER

-• A

•

Weltinghouse, white, entry
sever, works good, 17517117i$

* spa I Scrn.
(*»., dining rm.,
ill. Sprinklers.
•WBKIVA HUNT dub
7/7. Like newt. Vaulted
ceilings fhruoul-ceram lc
counters, garage w/storate•**.500
•CUSTOM in Peal Ham* In
Lech Arbor I Hoi tub! French
doors I Bookcases! Spill bdrm.
plant Wowll Only......&lt; m , 500
• HORIESII Tall the Master
about this lie -acre ranch
w/lt stall stabte. Tall him
there's a 4/7's horn* also
w/tpkt. A everything. All for
SIMM0.

CAU ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720

Cotortrak. channel lock
w/remote.SIM. 177 05*4

115— Computers

7544 Park Dr.. Materd.
M l W. Labi Mary EL, U .M a ry

teftwHM Totr*
117— Sporting Poods

/ Equipmeat

Gel An anrnver by the a n f M a H i t U y ,
o r get $10.00. Apply for a Soutttftust new car
loan and you're guaranteed an answer by the
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end of the
nexti business d ay -o r you get $10XX).
Then once approved, you can choose the
convenience of having your loan piyments
automatically deducted from your SoutHDrust
checking account.
Our car loans and ourcheddng accounts
come fully equipped w ith ^ tm N is t's guaran­
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best, we'll pay you for the inconvenience. Ask
for details on all our guarantees.

If you're looking «t a new car, u k e a look
at Southm ut’s car loans. With a note rate of
8-25%; and with guaranteed service, SoutHlhi*
can take you where you want to g a In style.
Egual opportunity lender. Subjei&gt;ci to normal credit
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fee, monthly payments will he $247-62 with a total
finance charge o f $1,95041. Anumat o f downpayment

pgffifj frith Mutmohik

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7799999; Hunter's Creek 3900 E. Village Center Dr.
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H#t*fd, Sanford, Florida - 8unday, December 27, 1902

Top retailers target improved sales
According to nuyor business rc
nation's three top retail stores are
K m art and Sean. Bach Is maneuvering to
Improve sales, but two of the three are

C entral Florida shopping com m unity.
WaMlart Is located at M 53 Orlando Drive In
Sanford.
Kmart Is located at 3639 i .«»mi Emma
Road In Lake Mary, and 3101 Highway
17*92 In Sanford. An expansion project Is
presently underway at the Sanford location.
When completed, It will provide almost
double the retail space that had been
provided at the store, one of the oldest
Kmart'a in the area.
Although there are some subsidiary S ean

i K i n i u u D ic m i.

^ ^ m a r tto f lg h U n g allegations by an NBC
television program regarding the use of
child labor overseas, in producing products
Identified as "Made In America."

Wal-Mart defends policy
NEW YORK - Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
vehemently denied allegations In an
NBC report that Its commitment to sell
American produets |s phony.
The "DateUne M KT report says that
despite Wal Mart's fervently patriotic
InUNR. the nation's No. 1 retailer
Imports lacraartngly vast quantities of
merchandise, exploits sweatshop child
labor In Bangladesh, has done bustling operation In China and displays
reign-made clothes on racks that
rodahn "Made In the USA."
Wal-Mart stock
------ a
td 91.75
on publicity

this week.
'
'
Wal-Mart spokesman Don Shlnkle
said that Imports account for only 5.9
percent of the chain's total marketed
i. He also pointed out that some of
NBC report was attributed to
organised labor, which has fought
Wal-Mart before over Its non-union

r

p o lld ft,

Sears may close
up to 100 stores
CHICAGO — Sears, Roebuck and Co. plant
to dose up to 100 of Its smaller stores
eliminating up to 5,000 Jobs nationwide
according to a Chica go Tribune report.
The report, citing company sources It did noi
Identify, also said Sears plans to shrink Its

"Wal-Mart stands behind Its Buy
America program." Shlnkle said from
th e com pany's BentOnvIlle, Ark.,
kniarters. "We find It Incredible
NBC and a coalition of labor
ms would attack a program de­
ed to do nothing more than create
In this country.

Kmart: W e're reinventing business we invented

'

•
id o

.

a•-'’•V •U •t *a »V.V; l's■'■•r-:8
• •.
fiSNMM
V&gt;• .

...

••

Kmart, founded In 1909 by
Sekactten Sparing Kresgs, a
tra v e lin g s a le s m a n fr o m
Pennsylvania, observed Its
30th birthday this past year.

•■
. ..

. cv

store, 3101 Highway 17-92.
Kmart’a 1991 Annual Report
says, "We've changed the way
we look, fed, think and act.
We re reinventing the business
we invented • and there's a lot
more to come."
Kmart has 2,400 stores na­
tionwide. The report predicts,
"By 1995. 2.500 Kmart stares

and a broad assortment of
q u a lity and p o p u lar
merchandise."

re d e sig n o f th e p h y sica l
layout. The concepts developed In the new faedtty will be

cent from 9750 fwfHfon In
1990. Fourth quarter oamtngs
were up 192 percent from tbs
same period in 1990.
Kmart recently opened a
prototype store la Oak Park.
Michigan, showing a complete

In —VHtPm to Kmart H "rr t i
the corporation subsidiaries
Include Bufldere Square. OffieeMax. PACE MsaabershlpW
arahouao, Pay Less D rug
Stores, the Sports Authority.
and Walden Book Company. •

Flea World sets record, makes donation

regarding the o
t (407)823-5554,

the holidays. Final figures have
not been revealed.
According to Flea World's Bill
Patti. "The record attendance is
partly attributed to the popular!ty of the newly expanded Pun
world, the seven acre femlly fan
park a t Flea World."
He continued. "Pun World has
been promoting the concept that
parents can relax while they
shop, by dropping the kids off at
Fun World."
He also attributed the arrival
o f S a n ta on th e day a fte r
Thanksgiving, and a new array

contributing (actor to the tmproved attendance.
This past wee*. Fisa World
owner 8yd Levy preishted a
check for over 9800 to Irene
Brown, director of the Sanford
Christian Sharing Center. The
money was raised over the
holiday season during the Fisa
W orld's a n n u a l com pany
Christmas party.
"I’m proud that my employees
are unselfishly giving back
something to the local oommtuilty ." Levy said. "They have

jr e ’U find even more

to tell us of the donation, we
purchased 6 0 turkeys worth
9550 for giveaways to needy
Sanford fcmJUee. Ws think of It
as our Christmas miracle." .
This is the eeoond year that
F lea W orld haa m ade a
Christmas donation to the cen-

901 North Park A m u * • tadbrd, Florida 33771 • (407)9804801

W ould L ike 7b Thank All

O fO ur Sanford Custom

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W1

\(
December

24,

1992

THURSDAY

30 Cents

M rvlng S anford, Lako Mary and Som lnola C ounty alneo 1S0S
85th Year, No. 104 - Banford, Florida

‘Stop killer’s release’

N E W S D IG E S T
No pspsr Christmas Day
The Sanford Herald will not publish on Dcr.
25 In &lt;ordcr that our employees may enjoy the
Christmas holiday at home with family and
friends.
ft

*

••m

-

-

'

\m

Important sky-watch
Aircraft pilots flying tn the night-time hours In
the Central Florida area are urged to exercise
caution this evening. It Is expected that a small
llylng object, pulled by eight reindeer may be
operating In the skies over Sanford. Lake Mary
and Longwood. Some believe the object Is In the
shape of a sleigh.
It Is not known to have radio equipment or
other means of airport contact on board, and
therefore may unexpectedly fly Into private or
commercial air space.
In case weather conditions change with the
cold front moving In from the north, a ninth
reindeer, with a red spotlight type nose may also
be seen.
The weather service and airport radar units
will maintain a constant watch beginning
shortly after dark this evening, to Insure the
utmost In safety procedures will be adhered to
during the fly-by of the special object.
The slelgh-llke object and reindeer arc
expected to be out of the area by day-break
tomorrow morning, and all cautions will be
lifted.

Local officials plead with governor today
B r N te a m iP A u r
Harsld Staff Writer
SANFORD — Seminole County's state attorney
Is to have met with Florida’s governor today In an
effort to convince him a convicted child killer
should not be released from prison on New Year's
Eve.
Semlnole-Brevard State Attorney Norman
Wolflnger Is to have been accompanied by State
Sen. Oary Siegel. R-Altamonte Springs In the
meeting with Gov. Lawton Chiles this morning.
"We will be taking two approaches." Wolflnger
said yesterday afternoon. "First, the long range
plans that will bring about laws more protective

(The public is outraged, and I
don't blame them. This isn't a
one-shot situation, it’s happen­
ing every day, and we want to
do whatever we can to stop it. |
___________-Norm WoTOngor, state attorney
of children, and keep those Involved In crimes
against children In jail far longer periods."
"Secondly." he continued, "the more im­
mediate approach we will be taking Is to keep this
particular Individual In Jail longer.,r

The night before Christmas

Children's advocates and law enforcement
personnel are pushing hard for legislative reforms
to keep child-abuse murderers such as Donald
McDougall behind bars.
"To let this guy out after he committed this
murder Is an absolute outrage," said Sen. Siegel,
who has been trying to find a legal loophole to
prevent next week's release.
Wolflnger commented. "The public Is outraged,
and I don't blame them. This Isn't a one-shot
situation. It's happening every day. and we want
to do whatever we can to stop It.”
"The Oovemor can lead this fight to restrict
such people as McDougall from being released
'
~ i BA

Christm as essen ce
touches mailman
and a little girl
By view I

Herald 8taff Writer

Christmas dlnnars sarvad

SANFORD — Essence Miles' fami­
ly doesn’t have much money this
Christmas, but the six-year-old has
a short list of things she hopes to
receive for Christmas.
She knows that her family can not
afford to give her the things she
wants, but she wrote a letter to
Santa and asked if he could bring
her a few simple gifts. Including a
Barbie doll.
Earlier this week, when the letter
carrier whose route’ Includes the
apartm ent w here Bssenae - lives

Two community meals will be served this
Christmas for the needy In the community.
The Sanford Rescue Mission will host a
Christmas dinner beginning at 11 a.m. on
Christmas Day at the Rescue Mission on 13th
Street. Volunteers will be serving meals to the
needy until 2 p.m.
At Holy Cross Episcopal Church. 401 Park
Avc.. the annual Feast for the Needy will be
served on Christmas Day from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The dinner Is for the elderly, lonely and
unemployed of the community. Everyone Is
welcome. The feast, which In past years has
been served at the Sanford Civic Center, is
sponsored by Holy Cross and the Cltv of Sanford
Community Development Office.
....

Lo cal retailers report
holiday sales soaring

Christmas trass raeyeltd
ij

Residents in the unincorporated areas of
Seminole County may recycle their Christmas
trees this holiday season by placing them at the
curb from Dec. 26 to Jan. 9.
Christmas trees will be colleced free of charge
to residents who place them at the curb on
regular yard waste collection days during this
two week collection period. . *

Sales are above expectations." she

Byl
Herald Staff Writer

From tloflroportt

"ANPON EARTH, PEACE,
600PWILL TOWARPMEN.. *

came to deliver the mall, he stopped
to chat with her mother who waa
outside. The m other asked the
youngster If she wanted to bring out
the letter she had written to Santa
in order for the post office to deliver
It to the North Pole In time for
Christinas.
The carrier, who wants to remain
anonymous, brought the letter to
Patrick J . Brennan, the new Sanford
postmaster.
"I thought we had to do some­
thing for this little girl." he said.
Since the letter might not make It
to the North Pole In time for Santa
to process. the carrier and Brennan
agreed to see what they could do to
□ B ss O lrL Page BA

Terrenes *TJ" Johnson, son of Aaron and Renee Keith of 8enford,
played 8anta outside hla parents' home throughout the Christmas
asaaon this year. He end his step-father deoorated the home at 416 W.
Crystal Drive with more than 8,000 lights this year.

SANFORD — If preliminary re­
ports of Christmas shopping sales
prove true, then most citizens of
Sanford and surrounding areas
should have plenty of gifts under
their Christmas trees.
A random survey of area stores
show sales are above last year’s,
although exact figures are not yet
known.
Mel Tomlin, the manager of the
Sanford Wal-Mart said sales were
well above last year's totals.
"S ales are exceptional, w ith
electronics selling particularly well.

Holiday travel affected

Shoppers should have a merry
Christm as this year "If they base it
on presents," she noted.
Wayne Kempton. manager of the
Kmart in Lake Mary, said although
precise figures were not known, that
sales were probably up.
"We had more early shoppers Ithis
year and more big ticket early
shoppers th is y ear, they gave
themselves longer to pay oft In
regards to larger selections with
layaways," be said.
There was a significant increase
In purchases of small appliances but
□

for?
■■■■■■ , .M ■

Gas prices creeping down,
trend expected to continue
ay view i

--------------

Herald Staff Writar

SANFORD - While you’re scur­
rying from mall to mall trying to get
that last m inute Christmas shop­
ping done you can rest assured that
the price on at least one Item Is
going down.

day to Christmas

H
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tamps ratum
Mostly cloudy with a
slig h t 20 p e rc en t
chance of showers.
Highs In the upper
7 0 s . W ind n o rth
15-20 mph.

uh

Prices at the gas pump have been
Inching downward th is holiday

Nathalie
season. And according to Nath
Herbst of AAA's traffic safety de­
partm ent the trend appears to be a
steady one. "1 think we're going to see the
price drop a little every week," she
said. "At least for a while."
While the statewide price survey
conducted by AAA show that the
average price per gallon of regular
unleaded gas Is 91.11. but' that

Holiday tourists keep roads
and airports busy in Florida
ByBMI
Associated Press Writer
ORLANDO — T hem e p a rk s,
hotels, highways and airports are
beginning one of th e ir busiest
periods In three years as holiday
travelers Jostle each other In and out
of the Sunshine State.
Slightly lower gasoline prices and
airline fares will help make the
Christmas-New Year's season the
m ost active holiday tim e since
1909, the American Automobile
Association predicts.
Cost-conscious Americans focus­
ing on family-oriented vacations are
targeting Orlando and other Florida

cities among their favorite destineAn estimated 33.7 million Ameri­
cans will travel 100 miles or more
from home this holiday, a 5 percentincrease over 1991, the AAA said.
About 34.4 million took trips during
Christmas-New Year's In 1969.
M sny vacationers are taking
shorter, more frequent trips, "ana
the extended Christmas holiday Is
an Ideal time for this type of travel."
said AAA President Paul R. Verkull.
It looks Uke a great season. We’ll
be full In the parks and hotels,
spokesman Charlie Ridgway of Walt
Disney World, the giant entertain-

Near Shah, 3, of Lake Mary may have gotten one thing ha asked for as
ha sat on Santa's lap earlier this weak. Shortly after ha talked to
Santa, his mother gave birth to a little brother for him just in time for
Christmas. As for the other glfts..he'll just have to wait and

KnfujM(^( u AND CHRISTMAS! EXTENDED HOURS N O W THRU DEC. 21 M F 9 -9 , SAT. 9 -6 , SUN. 1-5
*4 .f l^ p t T T ir i'^ j r T r .r r * 'Tr~T~~-------- »■•&gt;&gt;*

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Mr
8 8 - Sanford H w ld . 8anford,-Florida - Thursday, Decsmbsr 24. 1982

NEW S FROM TH E REGION AND ACROSS THE STA TE

are
Chlltt’ n#w budgst $33.7 billion
TALLAHASSEE — The budget Gov. Lawton Chiles has
proposed for next year is actually 833.7 billion — not 834.9
billion.
"T hat's great news." said a surprised Ron Sachs, the
governor's communications director. "I think that only makes
the governor's already reasonable and appropriate proposal
seem more reasonable and appropriate."
Last week, when Chiles unveiled his budget proposal for the
fiscal year th a t starts next July, he said It waa 834.6 billion, a
9.6 percent increase over this year's 831.9 billion budget.
But the bottom line of the proposed budget Included more
than 81.2 billion In fund transfers th at were counted twice.
The correct figure for Chiles' recommendations was #33.7
billion, according to a one-line footnote to the Inch-thick
spending plan.

Child#* will donat# to chariMas
PENSACOLA — Sen. W.D. Childers says he w on't keep his
promise to donate unspent campaign cash to victim s of
Hurricane Andrew and Instead will give the money to charities
In the Florida Panhandle.
The Pensacola Democrat, one of the slate's, top recipients of
campaign contributions, Wednesday said 'th e Legislature
already has taken c a re 'o f the hurricane victims in South
Florida.
Lawmakers, meeting in special session earlier this month,
earm arked 8600 million In new sales tax revenues generated
by spending on hurricane repairs for storm recovery and
rebuilding purposes.
"Obviously, with w hat the state did there’s no need for w hat
I have to go to the hurricane victim s," Childers said. "And 1
don't w ant to bear any. squealing about It except from those
who donated tn m y campaign. People got a fight to complain if
they gave m t m oney."
Childers, who la the dean of the Senate, reported that he had
spent 8289,644 through O ct 29. He said additional spending.
Including reim bursem ents to him self for out-of-pocket
expenses on the campaign trail, will leave only 860,000 to
870.000 left for charities.

DAYTONA BEACH - Boat-spCed laws
designed to protect people and the en­
dangered m anatee in a dor.cn Florida
counties may come under legal challenge
because of a Volusia County case.
A three-judge panel of the Fifth District
Court of Appeal has sharply criticised an
economic Impact study conducted for, the
state in VoluauCounty,
The report forecast the economic effects of
th e law on the boating Industry and
recreational boaters in the county and waa
used a s a baste for enacting the statute.
If the Judges find the study .faulty, the
114-year-old law could be Invalidated In
.law*.
Peppering an

with sharp-tongued questions. Judge War- Spence, representing Cttleens for Responsiren Cobb called a Volusia County report ble Boating Inc.
The state deliberately created a hair"bureaucratic gobbiedygook" and "meanhearted study to downplay the negative
*—*— t blabber.
nt Attorney G eneral Jonathan effects on the county's marine Industry.
Ologafr defended the statute which is being Spence said.
"They wrote a rosy, flowery Impact
challenged by local boaters.
Glogau conceded Tuesday that the re­ statem ent . . . so that the average person
searcher who prepared the study w asn't an who read that wouldn’t have cause for
econom ist, and th at his local research alarm ," he said.
Spence said the Department of Natural
consisted prim arily o f six long-distance
phone colls. And It shouldn’t m atter th at he Resources paid researcher Craig Diamond
called Ron Jon Surf 8hop In Brevard County 8388 to do the "comprehensive" repbrt.
for Information on Volusia's economy, he Diamond also did the reports for 12 other
PftA
counties.
Even If the report wa* Incomplete and
Ologau said the study was to provoke
flawed, Ologau told the judges, it still met debate and highlight concern*, and its
da.
quality waa not the main issue,
numbers and
"This is not Just six telephone calls," said
w h it not are not there doe* not invalidate Ologau. arguing that the official* who made
the statem ent," O kgau argued.
key derisions knew of the possible economic
Yea. ft does, answ ered attorney Hal fallout.

•groups
Christmas bikes
Horald Staff Writer
SA N FO R D - M any a re a
children will be receiving bikes
thte Christmas. The guts are
the result of three individual
bike projects by the Rotary
BraoWkat Club of Sanford.
Seminole County Sheriff's de­
partm ent, and the Sanford
Kiwante d u b in conjunction
w ith the Sanford Fire Depart-

Fort Laudardal# woman dabna prtz#
TALLAHASSEE — An 61-year-old Fbrt Lauderdale woman
baa claimed the second half of a November Lotto Jackpot worth
85.36million, th e Lottery Department said.
Oertrude Townsend will receive 82.68 million In 20 annual
lnatattmente of6134,000.
Don Ehlere, 61, of Clearwater claimed his half of the jackpot
two days after the drawing Nov. 21. The num bers were
4-21-26-26*30-36.
This week's Lotto jackpot is worth 820 million.

m

In the Kiwanis drive, over 80
bteyctee am being distributed
tor Christmas gifts throughout
i County. The drive Is
rtfon with the SanDepartment which
handling the repairs
nated bikes.
AJL McCtanahan. Sanford
Commissioner, is chairof the Kiwante Project
‘ now In Its third year,
ire out 30 bikes In
M cC tanahan said ,
were 80 In 1991.
like there will be

CrulM, Kidman o#ne#l plans to adopt
W IST PALM BKACH — A cton Tom Cruise and wife Nicole
Kidmen have canceled p?ft*** to adopt a baby. In Palm
County, according to court documents, and have demanded an
Investigation Intonow tbetr adoption petition became public.
Id a three-page letter to Chief Circuit Judge
T.K.
Hurley dated Bee, 7. attorneys for Cruise and Kidman
demanded "an |piny*iti tn investigation of
blatant breach
o f confidentiality and thf immediate dismtseal o f all court
personnel who wore involved."
Cndee and Kidman "have buffeted an irreparable invasion of

departm ent main station on
French Avenue.
According to McClanahan's
list, this year's trikes will be
going to children In Sanford,
Geneva, Altamonte Springs,
Casselberry, W inter Springs,
W in te r P a r k . O v ie d o .
Chuluota, and several other
locations. The largest percent­
ag e w ill be fo r S a n fo rd
children.
One particular distribution
will provide a bike each, for
five children of th e sam e
family. Several other families
have three children.
"We do a great deal of work
In gathering these bikes, fixing
them up, and distributing
them ," McCtanahan said yes­
terday. "but, all you have to do
te see the eyes of one child who
receives one of these bikes,
and you Immediately know
that It b a ll worth the effort"
M cdanahan said be would
like to extend his appreciation
to all the people and organisa­
tions *h** M p d supply the
be Ittwante pi

M
M
13 new bthso this y e te i'W v e

&lt; earns Cm

been doing th is for ateffy
years," said protect chairman
Ned Johan- " ftV p a it of our

ter an ateotfcm qratem th at fhraa victorious
white MMttdteM Ottto iM M l i to litem to
Mack and Hteganin nimrihienta
Karhar this m onth, Graham rejected a
plan offered ***** county that would have

a guarded'condition a l Ocean W orld,.* day

ached near the Jupiter Inlet.
Mind male whale was discover ed Tuesday
testa were done W ednesday to try to
of the whale's illness.
tie cornea after the deaths of two rsscued
undergoing treatm ent a t the Miami

districts for the Metro DoS
that provides more diverse
and will change the county's
permanently.

id March 16 w ith any runoff elections on

Midi Skid Monday, and a striped dolphin found beached on
stew arc'c coast d irl Tuesday.
Rarely does a beached Whale survive to return to th eses.
The pypny sperm whale is being kept fh Ocean W orld's
iHMHutea pool In a&gt;*och|dsti area away from the public *****
h er animate. Handlers anil attem pt to hand-feed the whale s

m is.

'I tig ah the judge come to a fair decision
trim

a t hia offioe, but waa not In when the
dedteon w u rrlr—cd tote Wednesday.
Attorney Thomaalna Williams, who repretented b uck plaintiffs, said the plan's
acceptance waa a breakthrough.
"It's a good plan fur the black communi­
ty," she said. "It allows three solid black
&lt;majority) districts and a fourth strong
eccese district.
"1 would hope that the community would
rally and move forward to get elections
under way and get on with the monumental
tM kofdeaU ng with running Dade County,"

e &lt;of By setting the eSeetton March 16, Graham
h i * waa delaying county ctectteoa a month past

security th a t they1

E ATHER

Ehl chance of aboa
the unoer 70s, W
st 10 to IS mph
b rw iy out of the north IS to 66
mph In the afternoon. Chance of
fain 30 percent.
Tonight: Clearing and colder
.with the low In the mid to upper
40*. Wind becoming northeast

T * t.?|F
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
P tty s M j 68-48
F U r r H f S I 48

9 -^| ^

THURSDAY
P tly a ld y 78-68

FRIDAY
P tly a ld y 68-48

^ S irfe tm o si Parti;
cool. Highs in the mid to upper
60 * Wind cast 18 m ph.
R e m a in d e r o r C h ris tm a s
weekend; Partly cloudy and cool
with a chance of rain Saturday.

SOMJKAD T A M f M ilt SjSO
a.m .,0elO pun.:M qJ. 11:56 a.m.,
-------- p .m . T I D I l t
P a y tia a Booafet highs. ,8:42
a m . feB7
3g»§a^

In the lower 40a Sunday.
In the mid to upper 60s.

W idely s c a tte re d sh o w e rs
rn sm ttim M rit.

_* ,

-

■

w

7 2 S ™
■&lt; .i'91
.s.

Sanford W ednesday w as 82
degrees and the overnight low
waa 64 as reported by the
University df Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
R ecorded rain fall for the
p e rio d , e n d in g a t 0 a .m .
Thursday, totalled 0 Inches.
The tem perature at 9 ■•■n.
today waa 72 degrees and
Thursday's early morning low
waa 66. as recorded by the
National W eather Service at the
Orlando International Airport.
Other W eather Service date;

an d sem i glassy. C urrent to
•u*w *“
1»-w un • m m
usta

3

iS S S
te s a c
HJJJS*
u » am&gt;
suwqBi
S S S f!
iSStete
jtesOrw

�Before1 Hsrsid, 8anfonl, Fiortds - Thursday, Deownbsr 24, 1M2 - M

Krv»
Kv
ti * !

n u n gam mm

D B B BBBEu h s BS53m

11Iif

Mm hklM lnlakt
Longwood police erreeted Billy Mdler. IB. of W inter Springe,
on Tuesday. According to the police report, an officer wee
Investigating a m an reported, ae suspicious, in a restaurant In
Longwood. when the m an fled. The officer chased him to Lake
Oem. where he sms seen apparently hiding, submerged in the
lake. After a K-9 dog and officer arrived, Miller was forced out

U tand and Batty Trstbar of
Longwood malty gal into tha
spirit of Christmas bringing |oy
and laughter to children of all
ages who want to see tha first
couple of gift giving.

Conwymoi burQlvy
Seminole Sheriff's .deputies arrested Roger Vaughn Sebree,
43. 1740 fountain Mead Drive, Lake Mary, eartyw ednesday
morning. Deputies located him near a pickup truck owned by
Charles Appleby of Sanford, at the boat ram p a t Cameron
W right Pant near Oeneva. When officers Investigated the
scene, they determined that the truck door had been opened
and Items moved about Nothing waa Immediately Identified as
missing. At the tim e of the Investigation, deputies said Sebree
had a piece of coot hanger In hla posirsilon. He was charged
with burglary to a conveyance, poseeselon of burglary tools.
and tottering ft prowling.

Stoeplng man arraatad
Willie C. Deleon, 33, with no local address, was arrested by
Longwood police near the Intersection of Highway 17*93 and
S.R. 434 Tuesday. Sheriff's deputies told police they had seen
Deleon standing by the roadway yelltng a t passing motorists.
When Longwood police arrived, they reported finding Deleon
sleeping on the sidewalk. He waa charged with disorderly
Intoxication.

Drug charge
Travis Treii Davis, 18. 4540 Gilbert Drive. Sanford, was
arrested by Sheriff's deputies Tuesday following a traffic atop
on Highway 17-03. He was initially charged with driving with a
suspended license. Deputies reported seeing him try to hide
some Items behind the seat of the car, and charged him with

Warrant arrests:
• Farron W. Cox. 39, 435 Church Aye., Longwood, waa
arrested In a parking lot near Ms home Tuesday. He was
wanted for (allure to appear on a charge of driving with a
gmom ded license,
'
•W illiam Hannon Harwell. 30, 3304 Park Ave„ Sanford,
turned himself In a t the John B. Polk Correctional facility
Tuesday. He was wanted on a w arrant for foiling to appear on a

C o p s : G u n m a n k ills 3, h im se lf
MIAMI — A d e a p o n d e n t
employee went on a shooting
rampage at a Christmas party In
a warehouse office, trilling three
co-workers before f t tally turning
the gun on him self after a
four-hour standoff, police and
A fifth person shot In the
rampage underwent surgery at
Jackson Memorial Hospital for
gunshot wounds to the chest
and was listed in critical condi­
tio n e a rly to d a y , h o s p ita l
spokesman Sam Kratis said.
Police said they did not know
the motive for the shooting, but
a neighbor said the gunman,
who waa a new employee a t ABB
Aircrafts, waa apparently de-

Sword-wlelding attorney
nabbed at •hopping mall

. R a r if f llitir o n s o n , 3 6 , o f '
lYneamla rem ained Wednesday
a t the Baoambla County Jail in
lieu of a $50,000 bond on

both of 1533 Harding Avenue, Sanford, were arrested Tuesday
by Sheriff's deputieefoUowInga flghlat tbelr residence.

InoMsnts reportedto tha Sheriff;
•C rim inal mischief was reported Monday night at Palm
Avenue Baptist Church. 3636 Palm Avenue. A church official
told deputies ■someone had removed mail from the church
mailbox, opened a num ber of letters, and threw the papers out
onto the roadway,
•D oris Ann Ott-Boass, 5355 Orange Blvd„ Lake Monroe,

I

wrapping bootfi. Aronson werif
into the buttery World store and
bought a $417 Robin Hood
aw ord he had seen In th e
window, said police officer Berad

The bodies of two men and a
woman aa well as the man police
believe was the gunman were
found on the floor. Police did not
know how m any people were
Inside the office a t the tim e of
the shooting, nor did they pro*
vide details about the shooting
and what transpired during the
lengthy standoff.
The Identities of the victims
and the wounded m an. who waa
taken to Jackson Memorial Hos­
pital, were not Immediately re­
leased.
“We heard a shot and we then

aaw three people running out of
the building/' Dora Luft, an
employee a t the nearby Xaaal
International Corp., told The
Miami Herald.
“ Then we heard a second
shot," she said. "Because they
were having a party, we thought
they were celebrating Christmas
with firecrackers."
Luft said the man who called
911 told the dispatcher. "The
guy was very depressed and he
started shooting. Hla m other

�d

Im

•

i

_

Now that Ronald Reagan httt
Rush Lim baugh aa ,!the No
oonaarvaUam In our country.’Mt'i
fw elghed in with a “
about thla amactng tn
Umbaugh utteny &lt; taatea talk radio today,
figures, his three-hour
According to the 1st

tfcxis whatever. W hat’s more, tn the great
majority of c a s e s !h e m an haa done hi*
W hin. Inevitably, he
m ates aome error, he
Is always quick to

the end of every program there
corpaea all over the floor. Prom Ted I
H illary C linton, and from "femi
animal-rights activists, the bualneaa
rapier (or ahould I aay bludgeon?) left

Week — three and a half mfllkm ht any-given

EDITO RIALS

^And the apin-oflk are
in w—«*"g Hi*
new belabour TV program * etrendy thindjp the.

giving to life’s
partners on earth
The daya from Thankaglvlng through
Chriatmaa are traditionally thoae In which
people aak for help. It may seem as though
everyone hnfl thetr hand o u t asking for your
money. food or unwrapped gilts.
With the spirit o f giving stressed during thla
season, moat people eventually will make
some donatkm to a familiar cause. They may
put a few dollars In the Salvation Army kettle.
donate to a
‘rtve. or take cans of food to
church for ft
distribution.
With Haiti
i exception, no one keeps a
record of who .gave,i. o r ) low much. Individu­
ally. thoae who. give to others, in moat cases,
keep it to themselves. It becomes a'matter of
personal conscience, and while it wouldn’t be
right to brag, boast e r j^ t a swelled-head. It
la the mind*

flpld of liiMli11Inw tftlft ilinWl ■'CMMMQwHBKHbElJMOaO^fl
efforts to b u r y lt tn the wee hours or (ah tn
W ashington) not run H at all. Hla hardoover
book. "The Way Things Ought To Be," la No. 1
on The New York Times non-flcUon best-seder
Uat. having aold a near-record 1.7 mlUfcmopptes
already,
J u st what is all the excitement about? The
truth aeema to be that Limbaugh baa a knack for
expressing the vtewa of an swftil lot Of people but exoresetnx thwn more forceftiHy wad mow
e n tertain in g ly th a n hla liste n e rs can do
themselves.
And the views? They are rock-eoUdty coo*
servattve, without any exceptions o r quaMftcs-

thetn.
L lm baugh’s big­
gest asset, though. Is
hla rollicking wit. He
c h o r tle s , c ro w s ,
Thn truth
b lo v ia te s a n d .de­
Mama to bo
nounces; but there is
that Umbaugh
always an undercurhaa a knack
r e n t of self deprecating hum or
th at makes his ele­
p h a n tin e e g o tism
bearable. At the
acme time, he never takes his eye oft the bell; At

JOSEPH SPEAR

So, you don’t know
everything, do you?
W hatever humility resides within me I
mostly owe to my paternal grandmother.
Viola Spear passed away nearly a decade ago.
but I Will never forget how she used to bring
me down to earth when I'd come home from
college — certain of my superior knowledge
In all things — and be stum ped by a simple
question, or say something stupid.
She'd aay. her voice encrusted with frost. "I
guess you don't know everything, do you?”
L o rd , how th o se i---------------- - ----------

during the
r ’l-ftitr .iw nnfcw t .W lrn T t^ l
;miW
flhhfUtt

ntm rJu'lffr 0,1 m#r

I •»«„*» rn n

diction: "NUCLEAR
BED: U.S. and Israeli
ver that Jobless exand Reid commandsal nuclear weapons
pa and waa ib is to t a p boU* the left
1
*!»® f lf o w w ^ iw r ty
t supporting hla election. The connext s e m i years will be Clinton's

e. The Republic minority In .th e Berfaie
1 throe vote margin necessary to pssWbtt
nd allow filibuster*. Who wtilOqpgnsas
i follow? The philosophical CUnton who
to raise 1150,600,000 by taxing the rich.
Clinton wl
l Democrat Jimmy Carter. As a former
member of Congress I hope for tMe
aha the political Clinton wins out. even
Lit’less probable that th e tr will be a
»— form In 1906.
• Lv
.
Lou Frey, J r.

Theory-of-the-Month
Club, scientists who
humility
seek to unravel the
maldM within
secrets o f the uni­
mat mostly
verse; I guess you
owstomy
d o n 't know every­
paternal
thing, do you?
grandmother. I
T he b est-k n o w n
. and moat enduring la
the Big Bang theory
— the noUon that the universe was created In
a cataclysmic explosion that produced vast
am ounts of gas and dual that have been
expanding, cooling and combining ever since.
I Imagine a scene, 000 years from now. In
which teachers talk of the Big Bang theory tn
(He same way we discuss the pre-Columbian
notion of a flat earth. The students of
tomorrow will sneer, shake thetr heads and
wonder how those primitive people of the
20th century could have been so dumb.
Indeed, the Big B ing theory appears to be
collapsing upon Itself even ss I write these
words. For example, there's the nagging
question raised by the clusters of stars known
as galaxies, and the clusters of the clusters,
a n a the superclustcn of these that keep
popping on the edge of time: If the universe
began as a uniform rhass of particles, how did
it get so clumpy? Well, they say, it's probably
because of this exotic m ass that creates
gravity that causes heavenly bodies to be
drawn to one another. We can 't see U. so we'll
call It'"d ark ma tter " Better yet, let’s call it
"cold., dark m atter" because not only can we
not aee It. Hut It moves around swfUUy slowly
as well.
There’s no end to the wacky talk. We've all
heard of black boles, but what of* "cosmic
strings" and "gam m a ray bursters" and
"atarauakca" and "blue stragglers" and "red
shift*'? Did you know that our own Milky Way
is really port of a large conglomeration of
galaxies technically known as "the local
g ro u p " ? A nd th a t th is la p a rt o f a
supercluster " th a t;
r
which Is called, the
j of things that
la moving toward si
&gt;invisible moss
known as “the jflra
'•? And that It
may all one gay c
on itself in an
ready forth!*?
UUs doesn’t sound like a bunch of

waa posed: Do you believe M ali began with a
bong or a t the w tt o f a creator? One of those
who offered .an answ er waa Col. Frederick
Gregory, the feat black commander of a
apace shuttle ml t t cm "I have touched the
rack and I have rend the book," he said. "I
believe In both."
A Harvard aatronomer, Owen Otngertch;
said that the more be k a ra s, the m are he sees
a "designer’s band to th e universe, a

�Sanford HsrsW. Sanford, Ftorfoa &gt; Thursday, Daoambar 24, IN S - SA

Headache powder recalled
dent of Ooody'a Manufacturing apparent tampering.
Co., eald Wednesday that the
"We urge consumers to coop­
plastic wrap had been cut and erate with the com pany's reWPttTOft-aALKM, N,C, - A glued back together.
auest not to consume the pro­
powdered hw rtacht m oody dis­
d u c t," Pood and D rug Ad­
tributed mostly In the Southeast
The victim , a 51-year-old m in is tra tio n C om m issioner
waa recalled after the potoortfng Tennessee man, died Nov. 30. David Kessler said Wednesday.
death of «*»an investigators —m Ooody'a said. The powder waa "We are working with the FBI.
ueed a packet th at had been bought In Morristown. Tenn., the Tennessee Bureau of In­
emptied of Me contents and Ailed but the company had no more vestigation and local authorities
with cyanide.
details about the man, where he to determ ine whether this Is an
Robert HalUday, a rice presi­ lived or a possible motive for the Isolated Incident."

&gt;•

Helping the needy
Exhausted but still working Wednesday, Seminolo High School ROTC
OTC cadet Mike Lance helps
prepare toys for distribution, at the Salvation

Army, 700 W. 24th Street In Sanford. The annuel
project provides hundreds of toys for children of
needy families.

f. we can to help the people of the
area." . *
.t.
The bikes are being distrib­
u te d th ro u g h th e *SaV atlon
Army, or by recommendations
from area schools and Rotary
members.
•: * .........
Ju lian said money for the
bikes was obtained Through do­
nations as well as hind, raising
efforts by the 25 members of the
club. "We also had a lot of
s u p p o rt from th e S a n fo rd

states."
early." Wotftngeraaid.
Former State Rep. Dick Bat­
"The State Statutes need to be chelor. who is trying to put
. Interpreted better." said Semi­ together a working coalition,
nole County Sheriff Don Sal­ ■aid he wants the group who
inger. "We believe the Depart­ met in Orlando Tuesday to push
ment of Corrections does not legislators to build more prisons
have to release McDougal."
for offenders and to appropriate
He added. "The entire system
money to treat the psychological
needs to be Investigated. The problems of abused children.
DOC should not be releasing any
P atricia Davis, of Brevard
violent offenders."
County STOP (Stop Turning Out
McDougall. convicted In 1063 Prisoners) Is actively Involved In
of aggravated child abuse and preventing early release for
second-degree m urder In the convicted kidnapberm, rapists,
torture-stabbing of Ursula Sun­ m urderers and other offenders.
sh in e A ssald In A ltam onte "We can't do anything on the
Springs. Is scheduled for release McDougall situation," she said
New Year's Eve.
yesterday. "That will have to
T h e Im p e n d in g r e le a s e
come from Seminole County. In
angered many Central Florida the form of an Injunction against
residents and activists, who are the Department of Corrections."
writing letters, signing petitions
She continued. "I don't know
and holding meetings to push for
at this tim e If we ean prevent
changes In prison regulations.
By yesterday, officials reported McDouboll from being released,
In excess of 6.000 signatures but If we can Just a temporary
had been obtained on petitions Injunction. It will give us mare
o p p o s in g th e r e le a s e o f time to work on this particular
McDougall.
Investigators said McDougall.
The objective of the petition Is
to p e r s u a d e th e F lo r id a
Legislature to eliminate early

37. who lived with the child and
her mother, beat the girl re­
peatedly. forced her to eat soap,
deprived her of food and water
for three days and made her
stand naked for hours reciting
the alphabet.
The body of the blond-haired
youngster was found In a pond
In Altamonte Springs after her
m other confessed to helping
McDougall dump her there.
Susan B arrett A'aaald. the
child's mother, was convicted of
m anslaughter and served five
years of a 15-year sentence.
« McDougall. who Is being held
in Madison County, got one-third
of his sentence knocked off,
good behavior and because
prison system Is crowded.
*We can't let the State tell us
the problem is overcrowding."
WoUlnger said. "We need to
keep more people of this kind tn
Jail, and tr there isn't enough
e. more should be built.
even If It's dorm itory type
quarters.

o r *

rrJ&lt;
2R**rW"vlc|“**'h
children.
.». \
*.»t o.
.
.tlw ramUy Dollar sto re -w Saw.
Woiflnger. along wt
ford, said sales had Increased
' V : “ i! V* I there
County State Attorney La
since last year.
Lamar, farmer legislators an d "1new items In that area." he
"U 's up over last year. We
children's advocates met This noted. Sales on new TV toys
won't have exact figures until
were also strong, he said.
past Tuesday on the m atter.
Regarding the purpose of the . S ales a t tn e S an fo rd JC January but I'd say everything
Is up." she said.
discussion . Lamar said the an­ Penney store were also up.
"Business Is good. I ts better
swer to keeping such crim inals
A repr esentative of the Kmart
locked up Is to Increase state th a n e x p e c te d ," sa id L isa store tn Sanford said, until this
Em
erson,
the
m
erchandising
spending for prison apace.
week, sales were running at
'.The le g islatu re leg alises manager. ‘‘Sales of cosmetics shout a four percent increase
and
Jewelry
were
strong.
They
escape from the prtaoo system,
over last year. Figures for this
sold Lamar. "Only 2.3 percent of make the perfect gifts. Other week could not yet to tabulated.
Florida's revenue goes to pris­ than thAL It was generally good
"The store la extremely busy.
all over the store."
ons. We have m
Debbie Ranforth. manager of It's filled with custom ers. Howand less m oney
other

John F. Briskey. 89, River
Edge Court. Longwood, died
Tuesday. Dec. 22. at Florida
Hospital. Apopka. Born June 16,
1903. In Birmingham. Ala., he
moved to C entral Florida In
1963. He was a civil engineer
and a Methodist.
Survivors include son, John
T.. Longwood: sister. Peggy Lula
D ren n cn . B irm in g h am ;, alx
grandchllden and 10 great-,
grandchildren.'
Woodlawn Funeral Home and
M emorial Park. O rlando, in
charge of arrangem ents.
Aiden Joseph Qreene. J r. 62.
of Whitewood Drive. Deltona,
died Sunday. Dim. 20. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital, San­
ford. Bom Apri) 20, 1930, In
Boston, he mpved to Deitons 17
years ago from Revere. Maas. He
was a police affloer for the City of
Revere far 14 years. Mr. Qreene
wee a Catholic and a Member of
the V.F.W., D.A.V: And the
American Legion. He eras a Navy
veteeran.
Survivors include eons. Kevin
Jo se p h . L ake M ary: A iden
Joseph, til. and Gregory John,
both o r S anfordi d a u g h ter.
Patricia Ingle, Sanford: brothers.
Edward. Chariton. Maas.. John,
o f M assach u setts, an d one
grandchild.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home, Deltona, tn charge of
arrangements.
ROTME.M0BF0RB
Ruth E. Hoaford. 68. of Cpllingswood, N J.. died Sunday.
Dec. 13, a t Underwood Memorial
Hospital. Woodbury. N J. Bom
July 2. 1904. tn Bonus. Ul.. she
eras a farm er resident of Sanford.
Fh* eras a tFH ilw^F f for Amer­
ican Home Service Company In
Clementoo. NJ . and a member
of St. John Roman Catholic

Church. CoUingswood.
Survivors Include sons, Walter
8. Jr., and Robert E. Sr.. San­
ford: daughters. Marian Williams
and Bette Jayne Dromgooie; 26
g r a n d c h ild r e n . 4 6 g r e a t­
g r a n d c h i l d r e n a n d fo u r
t-grandchildren.
fie Funeral Home.
. N «f...ln charge of

fiscated and unclaimed bikes
away for the needy children,
then to get the few dollars they
might bring in If we auctioned
them ."
All three of the bike distribu­
tions are expected to be com­
pleted by later today. "AH you
have to do is see the look on a
child's face when he br she
receives a bike." said Rotary's
Julian, "then you would know
why we really put ourselves
deeply Into this project."

the 12 m onths ending In Octo'b e r. Orlando handled 20.8 m il­
lion airline visitors.
"If It follows the trend, we
expect to be over 10 percent,
conservatively, over the holiday
period." Ms. Fennell sold.
Jim Reynolds, spokesman for
Fort Lsuderdsle-Hollywood In­
ternational A irport, said the
Christmas season "will probably
be the busiest we've ever had."
The airport expects up to 36.000
passengers dally during Its peak
days, he said.
Orlando's rental car business
Is one of the biggest In the world,
and some of the major compa­
nies ran out of cars to rent for a

couple of days lost year.
Jim Burgess of Herts said his
company and its competitors
were trying to avoid the same
problems this year, but they
urged travelers to reserve their
cars as early as possible.
Holiday travelers will benefit
from a alight dip In gasoline
prices caused by a year-Cnd
slum p In crude oil prices, said
Tom Schroder or the AAA clubs
of Florida.
F lo rid a's regular unleaded
gasoline averaged 51.114 per
gallon, or 1.4 cents leas than the
national average In December,
he said, and-other grades also
dropped slightly.

Tourists
_ I*
m ent complex

1A

Kmart." Julian added. “They
helped us obtain the bikes at a
good red u ced price, w hich
allowed us to get more than we
might have purchased."
The Seminole County Sheriffs
deportment has given 10 bikes,
as well as SO unwrapped gifts, to
the Toys for Tots drive. Sheriffs
spokesm an O eorge Proechel
said. "This Is something .Sheriff
Don Esllnger started several
years ago. when he figured it
was better to give the con­

In Central Florida.
Miami International Airport
h fs been "wall-to-wall people
sin c e la s t w e e k e n d ." sa id
spokesm an Marc H enderson.
"A nd we expect th e sam e,
basically, through the end of the
year."
The Miami airport expects a
slight Increase this year from Its
26.6 million passengers tn 1B91.
Besides the heavy Influx of
travelers from colder Northern
dim es, the Miami and Orlando
airports were banking on heavy
traffic from Europe, Canada and
Latin America.
"W e're a good value Interna­
tionally." satef^Carotyn Fennell
at Orlando International Airport.
"Air fares and the costa of
renting a car. hotel r ooms and
other things ore a very good
value for tourists coming to
Central Florida — and all of
Florida, really." she sakl.
International traffic was up
about 30 percent a t Orlando
International Airport th is year
through' October. Ms. to w e l)
el Increased 13.4 percent For

-TTT

sTfsr ¥11 Ms a n ib s i a lito a ish mb
thee rree 's
hhave
a re m ore
are ccustom
u o to mers,
m T th
Duyuig
per
Ilew
CM D
U y lfiM D
CT cuwo&lt;ufr&gt;
C u X Of l K T * motc
MOCC
c u sto m e rs - a h sp e n d in g
Iy thanl Mat year
year," h e

ST*

Girl
1A
make the young
girl's wishes come true.
After a little research, the post
office learned that the Martin
fa m ily h ad sig n e d u p fo r
Christm as assistance with the
Salvation Army, but that they
had moved across town and left
no forwarding address.
"They had qualified for food,
toys, and everything." the letter
carrier said. "They don't have
m uch a t all and they qualified
for all the assistance. The Bahra-

to take m atters Into their own
hands.
The carrier and the postm aster
contributed a total of 530 and
other employees will be asked to
kick In whatever they can to
cover the cost of the Items on the
list which will be purchased
directly from Santa’s workshop
and sent Priority Mail from the
North Pole.
The gifts are to be delivered
this afternoon to Essence's home
so .th at she wiu have..them to

M 5 Arm y w as Just unable to
g ffy j
j f e y w ^jf****1

M M a n k .1

^

I '

-

added
by the time the
post office contacted the Salva­
tion Army,, there were no Barbie
doUs. available for Essence. PostIt was time

v'
V, V
However, he noted there
difficulty'tn averaging salsa on a
d a y -b y -d a y b a s is b e c a u s e
Christmas was on a Wednesday
last year and will bs on a Friday
this year. A particularly big aales
day, such as Christ m m . Ere.
figure Is even lower in
would be In a different weekly Sanford where the average price
fdiiliT fast year, thus la.closer to 81.07 per gallon..
iflgures.
Herbal said.
At the 7-Eleven store on West
State Road 46 and Upaala Road
in Sanford, regular unleaded gas
Is selling for 81.00a gallon.
"I wouldn't call It a gas w ar."
said m anager Ken Anderson.
M adison. W ise.: d a u g h te r. "W e're Just trying to stay com­
Sandra W endiand. B utternut, petitive with the neighborhood."
Anderson said that he has
Wise.; nine grandchildren and
dropped his prices twice within
15 great-grandchildren.
• Stephen R. s»LUnff Funeral the last week. He said that other
Home, Deltona. In charge of stations In the outlying areas of
Sanford are doing the same.
He describes his store as a
high volume facility, and that he
fBUBA.
w ants to "bring as many people
Felix A. Rodrigues. 92. of In as possible. He added that he
Village Place. Longwood. died loves the competition.
"Competition Is nood for the
Tuesday. Dec. 22. a t South
/Seminole Community Hospital,
Longwood. Bora Feb. 21, f900.
D ow n th e s tr e e t a t th e
in ruerto Rico, he moved to Speedway gas station, manager
Central Florida In 1966. He waa .WIU Measersmith sold that he Is
planning on lowering his gas
tentative and Catholic.
Survivors Include son. Rich­
ard, Longwood;'
Ida; h alf brothers.
br
Florida;'half
Fin and

Edna Webb Morris, 85. Mobile
A venue, A ltam onte Springs,
died Tuesday, Dec. 22. at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
Longwood. Bora April 12. 1907.
In Charlotte Harbor, she moved
to Central Florida In 1981. She
waa a hold mold and a n u mber
of
United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Morris waa also a
member of the Over Fifty Club,
and American l-^gfon Auxiliary
Post 120.
•&gt;'Survivors Include •on. Joe
of 1002 Cypress A re.. Sanford, Webb. Altamonte Sprtn| N •*•*
died Wednesday. Dec. 23. at term, Cleo Ware. DaUeatCentral Florida Regional Hospi­ Rea. D etroit. L illian '
tal, Sanford. Bom Ju n e 30, Magnolia Springs.. Abut
1918. In Sanford, she was a grandchildren and six great
lifelong resident. She was a grandchildren.
!**
retired tsa rh rr and a member of
B aldw ln-P alrchlld Funeral*
Home, Forest City. In charge of m om . pom ci f KbTKM. nenor•
St. Jam es AAI.E- C hurch.
' Survivors Include daughters.
Puerto Rico; half atstaw “
Stephanie J . Ravend.-Sanford]
Esparto; Florida; throe
sisters. . Rosa
McCoy.
children.'
;
- Lee
* .«.—
~ SanIora: mree■greoacaparen.
WUson-Elchdberger Mortuary,
Norman A rthur Muth. 78. of
Inc., Sanford, In charge of ar- Stanton Street.. Deitook, died
■...........
Tuesday. Dec. 22. a t hto resi­
-JTg ;v&gt;. i r
dence. Bora July 18. 1914. In
Cascade. Wise., he moved to
Kaye Boarathal. 84. of 310
Olen W. McKinney.: 85. of Central Florida In 1983. He waa
Buttercup Terrace, Deltona, died a supervisor for E.R. Qodfrey Wild OUve Lane. Longwood. died
W ednesday. Dec. 23. a t hto Co.. Milwaukee. Mr. Muth was a Sunday, Dec. 20. a t her resi­
residence. Bora Apvg 17. 1207, member of Oeneva Lodge 44 dence. Born Novi 18. 1908. tn
Norway, she moved to
In Houston. Mo., he moved to FOAM. Oeneva. Wise.. Lodge
Deltona d g x years ’ ago from Council Chapter Consistory — Central Florida In 1981. She was
Valley of Madison Scottish Rite.
Washington, 111. He was a
Cremation Service of
Bahia Temple, Orlando. Bahia
er. w as'
Temple, Sanford, Deltona Civic C entral Florida. O rlando, in
tar Tractor.’C.1.L.C4), and Bank Association, O rest Lakes Club,
of Peoria. Peoria. Ul.He waa a American Legion, both of De­
past boar d member ltona. Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Wllltom Rosenthal. 85. of 310
ofD totrict 56 Schools, Washing­ Plymouth. Wise.. Ufe member of
the Disabled American Veterans Wild Otivs Lane. Longwood. dkd
ton.
Survivors Inclue wife. Lillian; Everglade State 2. He waa also a Sunday. Dec. 20. at his resi­
son. Daniel O.. Orange City: member of C A P . and chairm an dences Bora Sept. 4. 1907. In
daughters. Barbara Smiley. De­ of the Deltona Municipal Service Munich. Germany, he moved to
ltona. Gloria Cariocfc, Washing District Advisory Board. Deltona. Central Florida In 1961. He was
He was an Army veteran of a retired hostn r asm an and JewWorld W arn.
Cremation Service of
Stephen R.
Funeral
S u r.v iv o rs in c lu d e w ife.
Home, Deltona. In charge of Mildred M.; sons. Raymond. C entral Florida. O rlando. In
H u b e ftu s . W ise., N orm an.

exciting." the letter

Gas

prices tram 81412 per a
unleaded gas to 81 a gall
to d ay , a s to o n a s *
"I've already had two places
rig h t around m e drop th eir
prices." he said. "I've got to drop
mine too to stay competitive."
Sylvester Chang, who owns
and operates the Sanford Mobil
Service Center on French Ave­
nue in Sanford, sold that it to.
difficult for him to drop hta
prices as low as the convenience
stores ^r***"*** be offers addi­
tional services.
"T hat's Just the way it to."
Chang, who to currently charg­
ing 81.09 per gallon of regular
unleaded gas. said. "We offer so
much more so our prices are a
little higher."
Chang said the prices th at he
and the other stations are paying
are dropping as well.
"We are paying leas so we are
charging Irts, Chang said.

Yijil

"A Vny Special Uufy"

M.L JONES
Aprtm,nN'

HH*

blotter,you will always be with u*. Our momoriMof you
wiUte U terippto from a pebbto throws ia a pood. Ttey
will grow etrooger with each pernio# day moving on into
teftedty aa will our tova for you.
Ood has 88M dw tetoia you. Now, you art hit loteap.
■Uadi wo will Im p you loo.
gil-aorta; Otoria Dean
God Blue You!

�um-Pa-Pum-Pum»Pa-Rum-Pum-Pum*Pa-Rum-Pum-Pum-Pum*

First female attorney general
named as Cabinet rounds out
ByRONFOURNIKR
Associated Press Writer________
LITTLE ROCK. Ark. - Presi­
dent-elect Clinton Is rounding
out his Cabinet by selecting Zoc
Baird of Connecticut to be the
nation's first female attorney
general and adding another
black and Hispanic to key posts.
The appointment or Baird, a
friend of Clinton and his wife,
Hillary, was expected to be the
highlight or a Chrlstmas-eve
new s c o n feren ce at w hich
Clinton announces four Cabinet
appointments and the U.S. trade
representative.
Transition and Democratic
sources, speaking on the condi­
tion of anonymity, said Clinton
also would appoint:
—Former Arizona Gov. Bruce
Babbitt for Interior. Babbitt, 54,
Is a colorful outdoorsman who
sought the 1B88 Democratic
presidential nomination. Envi­
ronmentalists pushed for Bab­
bitt’s appointment.
—R e p . M i k e E s p y o f
Mississippi for agriculture secre­
tary. A major Clinton campaign
supporter and fellow member of
the centrist Democratic Leader­
ship Council. Espy. 39, was a
strong contender for the poet
early on. But some farm and
environmental group objected
and Clinton was considering
other candidates as late as
Wednesday.
—F o rm e r D e n v e r M ay o r
Federico Pena for transportation
secretary. Pena. 45, who became
Denver's first Hispanic mayor in
1983, has been serving as head
of C linton's tran sitio n team
studying transportation Issues.
—S e n io r t r a n s i t i o n a id e
Mickey Kantor to U.S. trade
representative. Kantor. 53, a Loo
Angeles attorney, was chairman
of Clinton's presidential cam­
paign.
With the Cabinet selections
completed, policy aides had
Christmas deadlines to submit
option papers on a wide range of
budget, policy and legislative
Issues. Hundreds of sub-Cablnet
Jobs, m any of them critical
federal agency heads, need to be
filled.
Working himself hoarse and
tagged to fill the Cabinet by
Christmas, Clinton tried to ap­
p e a se D e m o cratic In te re s t
groups th at demanded more
women and m inorities.*while
dispelling the suggested that he
was filling political quotas.
"It's clearly frustrating to have
quotas Implied because the gov­
e rn o r Is n o t fo r q u o ta a ."
s pokesm a n George
Stephanopoulos said Wednes­
day.

Baird, 40, would be the first
woman to head the Justice
D e p a rtm e n t a n d th e th ird
woman in the Clinton Cabinet,
fourth If Clinton's choice for
United Nations am bassador,
which he plans to elevate to
Cabinet level, la counted. Espy, a
Clinton campaign ally, would be
the fourth black in the Cabinet, a
milestone. Pena would be the
second Hispanic.
Baird, a former Carter White
House aide who Is chief counsel
for Aetna Life ft Casualty Co.,
arrived in Little Rock Wednes­
day night. She could not be
reached for comment.
Baird and her husband, Yale
Law School Professor Paul
Gewlrtz, are expected to spend
part of the New Year’s holiday
with the president-elect and his
wife.
She is also a protege of some of
the country's top legal powerhitters, such as Lloyd N. Cutler,
President Carter's White House
c o u n s e l , a n d W a rre n M.
Christopher. Clinton's transition
director and choice for secretary
of state.
In June. BusinessWeek named
her one of the 50 top women in
business, describing her as a
“ stra te g ic a c tiv is t" who Is
•'party to all major policy de­
cisions at Aetna and la shaping
the insurer's stance on public
Issues such as health care.'1
Prior to being hired by Con­
necticut-based Aetna two years
ago, Baird served as a senior
attorney at General Electric Co.
Babbitt was the early favorite
for Interior secretary but his
stock appeared to fade as Clinton
sought a second Hispanic, and
Rep. Bill Richardson became a
contender. Richardson, a His­
panic. drew fire from environ­
mentalists. and Clinton shifted
back to Babbitt, sources said.
He is an outspoken advocate of
preserving federal lands and
protecting th e environm ent.
B abbitt is p resid en t of th e
League of Conservation Voters
after serving two term s as
Arizona governor.
After word of Babbitt's selec­
tion became known, Richardson
said: “It was an honor to have
been considered. I always felt it
would have been a tough de­
cision had the position been
offe
“
........
Uia____ _
---especially •’Obvew
King, who M ete d mb'
effort. As chief deputy,
whip In the new Congress
forward to serving New Mexico
and the nation."
Pena launched the $3 billion
d o llar D enver In tern atio n al
Airport which la scheduled to be

The Joy of
Christmas
Goes
On Forever

open by next fall. Pena did not
Beck re-cicctlon In 1990 and has
been operating n Denver In­
vestment and counseling firm.
As Clinton made his final
choices, the list of also-rans
grew.
Brooksley Born, a liberal
Washington attorney who has
held senior American Bar Asso­
ciation posts, was thought to be
a favorite as late as Wednesday
for the attorney general's post.
Chicago banker William Daley,
brother of Mayor Richard Daley,
had been considered the front­
runner for transportation.
The longer Clinton took to
make his choices, the more
political heat he took from Dem­
ocratic constituency groups.

Gome! T h e y ‘fold cM e
In the true Christmas spirit we extend to
all our friends hopes for peace
everlasting and good will for all mankind.

From The Staff
&amp; Residents o f

H lLLH A V E N
HEALTH CARE CENTER
9 5 0 M E L L O N V 1 L L E A V E ., S A N F O R D
3 2 2 -8 5 6 6
•Pum* Rum-Pa-Pum-Pum •Pa-Rum-Pum-Pum -Pum* Rum-Pa-Punt •Pa-Rum-Pum-Pum -Pum»

F irst Prize W in n e rs!
Our Teddy Bear

Age Groupi

AMANDA PITTMAN
P A U L IL G E N
S a n fo rd

ERIN BRENDER

* HONORABLE MENTION ★
a-SYRfl.

f l i fiYBfli

ILJJJEBf

Shertay Hurseys
Jaaon Poloaki
Michelle Ademet
Courtney Costello Lindsay Duncan
Christine Stewar
Heather Fulghum Carol Hendricks
James Piersall
Jennifer Adamets Courtney Marsh
Sparkle Sims
Daniel Ricks
Rachel Sutherland Ashley Ren techie

The Herald extends hearty Congratulations to
our Winners and Honorable M entions!

W h a t batter tima
to say thanks to you
for your support?
Haro a vary happy holiday.

K ID S

COh

CO N TEST

W ishing you a
wonderful
H oliday Season
from
Your Friends at..

Two locations
toN fw you
W XgonLs! Or,

Longwood / Sanford
0 ftL U 0 0 U T * ^ |S U

2 |J

★ /fcw e

P u p S lu t
F rom left to rig h t:

Paul ilgen, Erin Brender, Amanda Pittm an

.u in j-u m d -iy -u in a-u m j-u m d -u m d -u iriH -ty

•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1992

�5
t
Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1002 - 7 A

MAGNAVOX

V1CT. R

Remote

r v it

TOSHIBA

r v ii it tt

k

I Noi/^tel

EPSON

law. M a r ma 1*0 day parted, any remaining
account batanca mm be eubtect to a Hnanca
charge at a raia o l up to 21% APR, depending
on your stala o l raaldanca. (60a minimum
AuntMu fmane* chartM) R e fti to wouf M cOilfl
account egmement tor mora daiaHa. Oder vaM
on qualifying pureftaaa made between October
IB. IM S and January 31.1603.

In tha Sanford Arat, Shop McDuff at:
MePuff SuoarCantw
Hwy. 1792 Seminole Cooler, 3705 Orlando Dr.

McDuff Electronics
Altamonte Mai, Altamonte Springs................ .
Orlando Fashion Square Mai, Orlando.............

.407-834*3400
.407-895-6064

PalIcy lar Advertised Moras: The products in this ad were selected tar in advance ol this ottering, therefore.

situations may occur where all products may not be available a all siw es it lor any ie»son an advertised item ts out o&lt;da*, we w ill ofter youi iuncheck or, Ifyou desire, a comtanble Cam. Havail**
'Special Purchase' and ‘ Limited Ouanlity* cams excluded ) We re n n * the right to lim it purchases to one item per customer. A ll stores may not slock ail dens. we arenot responsible torptdond or type

beef mey lose/ sforw i prise m» — y Ummtimi l float wmcofl, i
ism Prtem ‘DomiMe OepraedeeV ■ Sctore you buy: M cDutt w ill beat any verifiable price trom any local store sli
you lin d a verifiable lower price trom any local store, including our own, on the identical Item, we w ill

Copyright t

i iM ™ c o
E
Z
i iM Btured diaoonaltv.

m m

;

aa t v ir r m
Staled wattage based on FTCrules regarding maasurement o l amptrfwi
power ratings.
UcOuft Purchase Power Program* actual payments may vary depending on

�OA - Sanlorcl Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1992

Lake Mary
k id s’ gifts
to world

GOLDEN LAMB RESTAURANT.,

lUlit -S -S. '***.**• il .

Youand Yours A Very c ^

Wishes

7

MERRY HOLIDAY

By S A R A B E C C A R OS I ER

Herald C orrespondent

n
a « r v? a c t e n m
a i
B nR iEr A
K F A ST SP E C IA
L

LAKH MANY - b r n n l l y In
the uudlhirlm n in I..ike Mary
I'.leinenlai \ . I lie walls were tilled
Willi s tu d e n ts C lu ls in ia s puts in
iIn' world
i'll the wall were folders m ade
In look like litiM'd p resenls wllh
luiws. w rapping paper and pill
laps file fluid \\ Im m ade Idem
was n am ed on the ' u p " of (lie
p tesen i."
Here are several s tu d e n ts Ideas
loi pills to plve I lie w orld
• K oliln M a r li n w a n t s to
" m a k e a Itplit bulb dial would
b u m lot III m in u te s after Ibe
liplits wi'te tu rn ed oil, so you
im ild see w llfie you were polnp
• Sat.tit Ib li would "op en a
hip Iioiisi where iliild ien who
lived on die sin-els eould eome
a n d have a w .um room, lots ol
loorl and elodies a n d hooks to
lead to .1 library with m illio n able elialt s "
• Vanessa l.ane would like to
plve the world "a euro lot &lt;111
l.ital d iseases like AIDS and
eaneei and liom hle v iruses dial
kill people
• Mall (iroovet would like lo
m a k e everyhndv slop pollulm p
I he alt
He w o u l d m a k e
" s p e f f h e s and sipus dial sav
\ e \ e i I’ollllle
• | \ lei I'owell would "plow
tiees lot die w m Id lo tepkiee the
o nes dial die\ &lt;hi &gt;p down
• S t e p h a n i e M e,dor w o u ld
like to su\t die It w rail) lotests
we have It'll and slop people
lioni htilldo/m p |ust to m ake hip
hm ldinps

3 E g g s , G r it s

r /..v 'te s V

•i{ . L
w
t ' / '

r’

l

\

'•

O r H o m e frfe s,
T o a s t .............

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY DINNERS

_.

Roast Beef.........$5.00 Roast P ork.......... $1.25
Roast Turkey.....$1.25 Roast Ix-g of
Baked Ham.......$5.00 I-m tb .................... $4.25

M ay tlw- love of b o rn e atnl fa m ily he a
special pill to t re a s u re t l t r o u p h o u t th e season.

Includes/»&gt;
laio. iijptabh', souporsaliul, rolls&amp;Conihmul

Front Y our F rien d s at:

IIIIMIIV I.AKKAl'ARTMENTS

Serving S anford, Deltona, Dcllary,
O ra n g e City I'or O ver 11 Years With
R easonable Prices, G ood Food, Fast Service

2101 S. F re n c h A vc., (1 7 -9 2 ), S a n fo rd

y'~yy{[

M otel plays
Santa for
area v isito rs
By NICK P F E I F A U F
H e r a ld S t a f f W r it e r

SANFORD
Yes. Vlrpima. or
West Yirpmiu or Wisettnsln.
there is a S an ta Claus, a n d he
lin sa pill lor oui ol iown visitors.
The plli plvlup S a n ta m this
ease. I s die S u p er H Motel, on
S .b lb near • sli 51 ol InU isiale

j[~i&gt;Tjrjair~pir n'i

'irr|»E~iwh; ngf

OFFER ABS

I

Here in Sanford a s well a s
nationwide. S u p e r H Motels are
ollermp tree aeeom m odal Ions oil
C h ristm a s Kve. to a nyone vislitup a Irieud or relative In a
nttrsm p hom e veterans home,
hospital or Ire.itim ill eettler.
"We want to elim inate lodplup
u i s i s as a battlet lo visitinp a
loved one ovei i lirisim as." salil
Harvey devveti. ehlel operailnp
nil leer.
AppioM m aielv b5() Super H
Motels nationw ide will be laktnp
part in ibis d o o m s at die Inn
propram It will be the third
consecutive y e a ro l the project.
"W e expeel a solid Increase
over HUM." J e w e ll said " T h e
word ol-m oudt luulds with every
year."
file Rooms at the Inn propram
was inspired bv a sim ilar p ro ­
pram he pun live years apo liv
S u p e r h Ir u n e h ls c e L in d a
I haraldson. In l-arpo. Nl). "W e
had several kindly irapedles dial
oeeurretl aro u n d C hrisiiu a s and
I h a n k sp iv in p ." sh e said, " so
those holidays were associated
wllh a lot ol had m em ories lor
us. We decided a propram like
ilils would help us lu rn that
nepadve leclinp into som elhinp
positive, a nd il h as."
She added. "Il really pills us
a n d our stall in die holiday
sp irit."
Jew e ll stressed dial die p ro ­
pram owes Its su cc ess lo motel
em ployees as well as die Iraneltlsees a n d exeentlves. "O bvi­
ously. we would all prefer lo be
ai hom e vviili out loved o nes on
C h ristin a s.’* he said. "Hut our
m aids a n d m a n a p e rs have pone
out ol ilieir way lo m ake litis
p topram w o tk."
S an lo rd S u p e r H m an ap e r
C harles ( d s s coniine tiled. "W e
a t e Io o k I n p l o r w a r d l o
parllt Ipallnp m tin project apain
litis year. We believe II is a
v v o n d erlu l a n d w o r ih w b lle
p e slu re ".
Coss explained dial there are
eerlain verlllealion re s id e lions
th a t a n t e i p i i r e d " T i l l s Is
primarily aim ed at people com
inp lioni out ol lown and out ol
die stale
he said, " to visit
people in i m r s l n p h o m e s or
hospitals w hen o v e i itlphl lodp
mp would not lie available, and
whi te dn visitor miplii Imd li
dillii nil lo Imd a place lo slay
with Irlcndsoi relaiives "
As ol \«IV :tc» So pel h bail tlJ'2
p t o p e t l l e s m Id s t a l l 's a n d
C anada, vviili a n addiilonal II
ptop etlle s hem p developed file
lotal lotlpmp a s ol that dale was
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2440 S. French Ave., Sanford

Ph. 323-2132

M-THUR. 9 AM - 7 PM. FRIDAY 9 AM • 8 PM, SATURDAY 9 AM • 6 PM

�1 l HUE . X 4 E
I ’a B R rj-■&gt;*• *&gt;.«.
L i-—
J &gt; 1 1 H iM ffii.

1L O C A L L Y
JCC offering classes
MAI I LAND — C hildren's tennis .mil gym
nasties classes will be ottered beginning Sim
day. J a n . 3. ai the J ew ish Ciiinimmitv Ceniet nl
t entral Florida. 8 5 1 X Mail land Avenue
Tennis lessons will be available in Heglnnei
Advanced Hegiuncr. and I’re School classes
G ym nastic lessons will be olleied lot children
.1 vea ls and oldei Available classes tuehidi
I’re te a m W o rk o u t. S y n e h o n iz e d T u m b lin g
Team, beginner a n d advanced lieglnnei skill
classes, a n d t beet leading.
Registration lor these and nihci pingrnuis is
now available For mitre m lorm alion or in
icglstcr. call 615-5933. exi 75

Umpire clinic planned
SANFORD — The Saulnrd Ollieiaimg Assot i.t
lion h a s scheduled an n u i|u ie s clime loi the
weekend ol J .m u a rv 9 and l&lt;&gt; ai S.mlnrd Citv
Hall. 3(H) N Park
Tin clinic, which will begin at 8 a m limb
days, is lor a n v o n e Inieresied in becom ing an
American Soliball Association e c u died um pire
'The cost is 820
For more liitormailon. call Duane l.alolletle
322-9026. or the S.mlnrd Kecu-aimii Dep.ut
incut. 330-5697

AROUND THE ST A T E
UM gives Erickson new pact
MIAMI — Last week. Dennis Erickson said lie
Intended to coach the Miami H urricanes lot
m any years Incom e.
On W edn esd ax . the school had it in writing
Erickson signed a new seven-year contract
which will lake elleel J a n I a n d run llun u g h
1999 It replaces E rickson's cut lent deal, which
had lour years in ru n and paid him an estim ated
$ 3 7 5,000 a year.
Financial te rm s ol the new ag reem ent w eten i
released
The contract prohibits Erickson Irout going n&gt;
a n o th e r Division l-A school as head coach J u s t
last week there were ru m o rs that he had been
offered the A uburn job.
T h e door to I lit* NFL re m a in s ajar, although
Erickson has repeatedly denied an interest m
Iniuiug the pros.
"My family a n d I love South Florida a n d the
university, a n d I plan on staying at Miami a long
tim e ." he said in a statem ent There was next i
a n y thought to m y leaving Miami and tins
should tiuully e n d all that speculation."
In four s e a so n s u n d e r Erickson, th e H urri­
c a n e s tire -1-1-3 a n d have won two national
c h a m p i o n s h i p s . II they clinch a n o t h e r bx
beating A labam a in the S ug ar lioxvl on •lan. I
Erickson xvould becom e the llrst coach to win
three titles In his llrst lour y ea rs at a school
T h e H urricanes' 29-gam e w inning streak is
the n a tio n 's longest.

Heat lose game, Seikaly
MIAMI — Karl Malone had 23 points am i 16
re b o u n d s W ednesday night to help the Utah
J a z z to a 92-86 victory over the Miami Heal,
xvhlcli lost c e n te r Kony Seikaly wlih a n apparent
knee injury late in the game.
Seikaly hurt his right knee w hen Grant Long
lell to the floor against Ids te a m m a te 's leg while
iry iiig fo ra re bound xvilli 1 30 rem aining.
Utah, one ol th e NHA's best road team s, ended
an eight-day trip with a 3-2 record. Miami,
mired in last place In the Atlantic Division,
suffered its lorn t It consecutive loss.
T h e Ileal shot just 38 percent and h a s scored
less I him 9 0 points in each ol the past three
games.
Rice scored 18 points but m issed 13 ol his 21
shots. Seikaly had IH p o In tsa n d 1 0 re bounds
Jell Malone scored 15 points lor Utah.

A R O U N D T H E N A T IO N
Whalers overtake Lightning
HARTFORD. Conn. — Rookie Patrick Poulin
scored ixvlee in a 2:05 s p a n of the second period
and S can Hurkc stopped I!) s h o ts to help the
Hartford W halers beat the T a m p a Hav Lightning
3 - 1 on W ednesday night.
Poulin, w ho hits seven goals in Ills last ID
gam es, had Ills second two-goal gam e ol the
season. He broke a 1-1 lie with a power-play goal
ai 15:-17 ol the second period a n d added his lOtli
ol lhe season ai 17:52.
Geoff S an d erso n had his team -leading Kith
gual for the W halers, who ex te n d e d Ihcir hom e
unbea te n streak to six g a m e s (-1-0-2). Terry Yuke
and Murray C raven ea ch had two assists.
Hurkc. xvlio slopped I I sliols in the llrst
period, allowed only a power-play goal by
Sliaxvn C’ham b iT s a s lie im proved Ills record m
5-2-2 over his last nine gam es. H urke's strong
play has been a p rim ary factor in Hartford's
8 7-2 record since Nov. 18. ineluding 3-1-2 over
the last six gam es.
'The Lightning have won four ol their Iasi
seven but have gone 5-1-1 since mid-November.

County
Blue Wave
tops Pats
in Classic
title game
By DEAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
OVIEDO — Most people have been
told that It you work hard. good
things will h appen.
T h a t a d v ic e p aid oil for th e
G a l n e s v l l l c - P . K. Y n tijjc h o y s
basketball leant W ednesday night
a s they used a stilling lull court
press to h a tte r Lake Hrantley HI 6 0
In the eh a in p io n sh lp nam e ot the
C entral Florida Classic at Oviedo
High School.
"I fell like we played hard er th an
e v e r y b o d y w e p l a y e d In t h e
to u rn a m e n t." said I’.K. Yonge head
coach Mike DeLucas "W e executed
som e things tonight that bail not
w orked before a n d p re tty soon,
tilings snow balled and we started
looking very unselfish Hut I fell
hard work w as the key."

T he v ic to ry w as th e 11r s t
to u rn a m e n t c h a m p io n s h ip ever lor
T he Dine Wave, which Improved to
7 -1 on the season. Lake Hrantley
ended the to u rn a m e n t with a 5-3
record.
I’.K. Y onge's p re s s u r e defense
foreed the Patriots Into eight llrst
q u a r te r tu rn o v e rs as It grabbed a
15-9 lead. Lake Hrantley m ade an
early run a n d took a lead in the
second period but T he Hluc Wave
ca m e back to lead 30-25 at In­
term ission.
T h e third q u a r te r was m u ch as
the first, with P.K Yonge forcing 10
turn o v ers a n d building a 53-36 lead
enterin g the final eight m inutes.
The Patriots played heller in the
fourth s ta n z a but the lead and 27
t u r n o v e r s w e r e t o o m u c h to
overcome.
A ll-T n u rn u m e til s e le c tio n J a y
Outcalt led T he Mine Wave with 22
points. Also in double figures were
A ll-T o u rn a m e n t p ic k s T erry
J a c k s o n a n d Mlcah Hyars with 15
points each. Hvars was also n am ed
the Most Valuable Player of the
to u rn am e n t.
Adrian L azar and Erie Skelton,
w h o w e r e n a m e d to t h e A l l ­
T o n m o m e n t t e a m , led L a k e
Hrantley with 15 and 13 points,
r e s p e c t i v e l y , w h i l e Mutt C e rto
chipped In with 12.
O th e r m e m b e r s of th e A ll­
T o u r n a m e n t t e a m w ere Alfonso
Razlcl of S o u th Dade and Pedro
Redding a n d Cedric Gilbert from
Largo.
C E N T R A L FLORID A CLASSIC
a tO V IED O H IG H SCHOOL
CHAMPIONSHIP
P.K. YO N G E It, L A K E B R A N T L E Y M
Lako Braniltr (40)
Coaltcr 3 50 0 7, Pollock 0 00 00. HayesCOOOO.
Shaw 0 2 0 0 0. Skellon 5 It 2 2 12. Tadd 03 00 0.
Cobcrly 1 2 00 2. Whitman 1 3 2 2 5. La ia r « 14 35
15. Certo 2 2 11 12. Cro*» 3 3 00 4 Total* 21 45
15 1740
Gainesville P.K. Yonge (III
Weiss 1 300 2. Outcalt I 11 4 4 22. Jenkins 5 »2 2
15. Jackson 2 4 44 1. Baker 14 1 2 3. Doherty 0 2
0 2 0. Perez 0 0 0 0 0. Wilcox 3 7 0 0 4. McGrllf 0 0
2 2 2. McDonald 2 4 0 1 4. Goldladen 2 3 0 1 4.
Byars4 113 4 15 Totals: 30 42 II 2411.
Lake Brantley
I 14 IS 24 — 40
P.K. Yonge
II 15 23 21 - It
Three point Held goals — Lake Brantley 3 10
(Coaller 1 2. Skellon 13. Whitman 1 3. Shaw 0 21.
P.K. Yonge 3 I (Jenkins 3 5. Weiss 0 I. Baker 0 1.
McDonald 0 1). Team touts — Lake Brantley 21.
P.K Yonge If. Fouled out - P K. Yonge, Wilcox
Technicals — Lake Brantley, bench. Whitman;
P K. Yonge. Wilcox. Rebounds — Lake Brantley
23 (Tadd 7. Skellon 4); P.K. Yonge 32 (McDonald
7. Byars 4). Assists — Lake Brantley 9 (Skellon 3.
Latar 7); P K Yonge 11 (Jackson 4) Turnovers
— Lake Brantley 27; P.K. Yonge II Records —
Lake Branlley 5 3. P K Yonge 7 4

W here’s the offense?
As tirst-year coach Bob Traina
(right) watched In disboliof, the
S e m i n o l e High S c h o o l b o y s '
b a s k e tb a ll team c o n tin u e d to
e x p e r ie n c e h o rrific to u rth
quarters throughout tho Contral
Florida Classic. &gt;n tho seventhplace gam e on W ednesday at
Oviedo High School, point guard
Travis Perkins (No. 5, above) and
his Arrow Force One team m ates
m anaged just six points in tho
fourth quarter in a 36-29 loss to
the University Cougars.

University gets best of Seminole
By DEAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
OVIEDO - University High S chool? A boys' b a s k e t­
ball pow er?
If y o u 'r e a fan of a S em inole C o unty team , you m ight
think so.
In th e s e v e n th place g a m e of th e C entral Florida
Classic W ed n esd ay afternoon at Oviedo High School,
th e C o u g ars won (heir third straig h t g am e over a
S em inole C o u n ty o p p o n en t, edging S em inole 36-29.
Arrow Force One overcam e a very slow start to lead
23-20 after three periods. Hut once again, fourth
q u a r te r scoring blues deprived S em inole of their third
straight victory.
"W e played well until the fourth period." said
S em inole head couch Hob T ra in a . " T h a t o n e 's really
been tough for us. We still h a v e n 't developed a killer
Instinct, o ne th at s ay s this g am e Is o u rs ."
In the o th e r consolation g a m e s W ednesday. Moore
C o u n ty from L ynchburg. T cn n .. used a big fourth
q u a r te r to edge Titusville 4 2 - 4 1 for fifth place a n d Largo
took the lead early In th e second period a n d held off
H ialeah-South Dade 74-67 lo c la im third plucc honors.
S em inole got back into th e g a m e behind a strong
defense (hut held University w ithout u field in the third
period until only 0 .3 3 sec o n d s re m a in e d In the stanza.
A steal a n d a layup by Matt O 'C allahan w as the first
field goal for the C ougars In th e third period of two
gam es. Oviedo h ad held University to only a pair of field
goals Tuesday.
Hut a s in T u e s d a y 's gam e, the C ou g ars c a m e to life at

Complete llitlngi on Pege 2B

C E N T R A L FLORIDA CLASSIC
at OVIEDO HIGH SCHOOL
SEV EN T H PLA C E
UNIVERSITY 34. SEM INOLE 2*
Seminal* (2f)
T Perkin* 0 0 0 0. Robert* 3 0 04. Train* 00 00. R Perklnt 10 0 2. Parker 7
I 3 5. Fuller 0 0 0 0. Daniel* 4 4 4 14. Howard 0 0 0 0 . McCarrell 0 0 0 0 . Hall 0
0 00. Holloway 0 0 0 0 Total* 14 5 7 79
Univ*r*lty (34)
Torre* 0 0 0 0. O ’Callahan 42 7 12. Newton 0 0 00. Jone* 2 3 4 7, Vicker* I 0 0
2. Abbott 5 5 5 15. BlluOOOO Total* 12 10 11 34
Seminole
3 It
f
4 -2 9
Unlverilty
I
f
3 14 — 34
Three point field goal* — Unlvertlty I (O'Callahan). Team foul* —
Seminole 13; Univertlly 7. Fouled out — none Technical* — none Record* —
Seminole 3 I; Unlvertlty 4 S

the Im ploring of C oach Vernon Hair a n d played Inspired
basketball In the fourth q u arte r, taking the lead for
good on a three-pointer by O'C allahun with 5:33 left In
the contest.
Arrow Force O ne had to foul in a n attem p t to catch
up. but O 'C allahan. G u s Abbott a n d C hris J o n e s hit six
of six free throw a tte m p ts In the final m in u te to secure
the victory.
“ T h is sho u ld not be a problem ." said T raina. "Hut we
bud a n em otional g am e last night (a victory over
Seabreeze) a n d we c a m e back today a little llat. We just
never s ee m e d to get psyched up. T he gam e went so fast
that so m eo n e In th e loekerroom asked If we had played
four q u arte rs. I ask e d th e m w here they h ad b ee n ."
T ra in a fell U niversity's deliberate offense h ad h a m ­
pered his t e a m 's play but that they had better get used
to ll.
C S e e C o n so la tio n . P a g e 2B

Healthy Marino to play in Pro Bowl this year
By STEVEN WINE
AP Sports Wriler

reporters, " b u t It's not a Joke. Every tim e I've
m issed, th e re 's b ee n a reason for m e to miss.

MIAMI — Q u a rterback Dan Marino s a y s he
plans to play In the Pro Howl for the first tim e in
eight years.

"If I stay healthy. I'll play. It's really s o m eth in g
I'm looking forward to. I’d like to play in o ne
ag a in before I'm d o n e ."
While the D olphins' u n d e rach iev in g offense
will have three p layers al the all-star gam e.
M iami's su rp ris in g defense will be re presented
only by Cox.

Marino was o ne of four Miami Dolphins n a m e d
AFC s tarters W ednesday. T he others were tight
end Keith J a c k s o n , tackle R ichm ond W ebb a n d
outside linebacker Hryan Cox.
NFL players a n d coaches selected Marino for
the sev e n th time, a Dolphins record. Hut he lias
played in th e g a m e only following th e 1984
season, usually e x c u sin g him self — a n d dra w in g
b arb s — by citing a need to u ndergo arthroscopic
knee su rgery a s soon as Miami's season ends.

UASEUALL
ti p .m — SUN. J a p a n T our 1992

clipped

Marino p lans no surgery this winter, however,
a n d for a c h a n g e expressed a desire W ednesday
to play In Honolulu.
"You g u y s m a k e a Joke out of It." he told

I tic D olphins' offense h as scored Jusi five
to u c h d o w n s In th e past five gam es, hut its
re p u ta tio n is better th a n that.
" T h is team h a s been know n lor a powerful
offense.” J a c k s o n said. " T h e y know w e're going
tlu o u g h problem s, hut we still have w eapons
dial ca n put points on the scoreboard, even
th o u g h w e 're struggling."

" T h i s d e fe n s e d o e s n 't get e n o u g h cred it
league-wide." Cox said. In a reference io m edia
coverage, be added: " T h is defense doesn't even
get en o u g h credit a r o u n d h e r e ."

J a c k s o n , signed by Miami a s a free agent in
S e p tem b er, m a d e the NFC team three tim es
while playing for the Philadelphia Eagles.
W ebb h a s been selected to the Pro Howl each
season since Joining the NFL in 1990. Cox. a
sec o nd-year pro. m a d e It for the lirsi time.

A m ong those left off th e AFC roster w ere safety
Louts Oliver, w ho h a s five Interceptions a n d 200
re tu rn yards, a n d rookie defensive e n d Marco
C olem an, who is second only lo Cox In tackles
a n d sacks.

" T h e guy I w as most hapjiy lo see get the
recognition was Hryan C ox," coach Don Sim la
said, " l i e 's had a fine year a n d h a s really
upgra d ed o u r defense."

Kicker Pete S loyanovleh. the NFL's leading
scorer, also failed to m a k e th e AFC team .

E d ito r ’s n o te: C om plete Pro lioxvl rosters on
Page 2H.

r ••

YOUR LOCAL E

�a s - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1992

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
DOQS
Sanford Or Undo
Wednesday night
First rat* — i/ lt, C: II 04
6 B tlly Lou Cutter
It 00 * 70 4 70
J Friendly Crane
5 00 5 60
2Cr'tCashO ne
O (J 6) 77.60 PI6 Jl 11.40 T (4-3 7) 140.70
Second race — 1/0. D: It.77
4 Jutta Bo
17 00 4 00 1*0
I Scarlet Warlord
4 40 7 60
7Witker sBiskel
• 00
O (14) 17.00 P 64 1! 40.70 T (4 17) lOt.40 DD
(6 4) 51.00 S I4-I-7-J) 741.40
Third ra c e -5/14, 0:11.41
5 A pple Jam
17 00 0 40 0 70
1 Shurshol Huck
70 00 7 70
7 D R Midnit* Rote
4 60
0 (1 5 ) 114.40 P (5 1) 701.70 T (5 5 7) 767.70
Fourth race — 5/16, B: 71.77
1 VieOueenofdubt
75 40 0 00 5 00
5 Bonnie Sweet Pea
0 00
7 Whispering Lady
5 00
Q (1 5) 70 00 P (1 11 40.00 T (1-1-71 561.00
Fifth r a c e - 1/0, C: 70.77
• Mike's Kink
10 00 5 70
7 Pretty W illy
4 00
4 Swan Down
a (7 1) 16.40 P (0 7) 01.70 T (0-7-4) 717.40
s u th fo c e — 1/16, D: 71.70
I Wlllie't Girl
7 00 7 00 100
4 Burner Trouble!
1.70 7.60
0 Public Loan
7.40
0(1-4) 77.40 P (1-4) 77.70 T (1-4-0) 171.00
Seventh race — 1/14. A: ll.Ot
7 Bold Face
75 60 5.40 400
5 Friendly Eagle
7.60 140
t Becbob Woody
0 (7 1) 11.00 P (7-1) 141.00 T (7-1-0) ITl.tt S
(1 10 4) 7147.00
Eighth r a c e - 1/16, C: 71.14
1 Merry Around
10 00 7.40 4.40
4 Blrdt Foot Loose
7.40 460
6 C r‘t Tlpacanoe
4 60
O (1 4) 11.00 Pll-4) 10.40 T (1-4-4) 470.40
Ninth r a c e - 1/0, B: It.M
J Y t J u t l A Winner
7 00 1 40 7 40
1 Two Line Past
t 00 1 40
5Omni Phantom
7.40
0(1-7) 77.00 P (7 1) 17.00T (7-1-1) 710.44
loth r a c e - 1 / U , Cl 11.lt
1 By Cracky
0 70 100 7.00
1 Ml Moonstone
4 00 160
5 Lll Ity Bltyone
7.00
0 (1 1 ) 14.40 P (1-1) 70.00 T (1-7-1) 41.00
11th ra c e -1/16. 0:11.04
1Country Duchctt
17.00 100 4 70
7 Femme On Fire
100 5 70
4 LIHIe Movement
160
Q (1-7) 74.64 P (1 7) 64.40 T (1-7-4) 710.00 TT
0-1 11-7 4)7104.00
17th race — 7/10, B i 44.07
7 Lightning Feel
0 00 7 60 1.10
7 R V Hot Pursuit
4 40 140
6 Varnoote Kit
760
0 (7 7) 16.00 P (7-7) 40.00 T (1-7-4) ttt.40
11th race — 1716. A: 11.17
0 Helen Me Gee
0 70 1 00 140
4RaclnCal
160 160
4 M l B11la
1.40
Q (4-0) 16.04 P &lt;M&gt; 71.00 T (0-4-4) 114.00 QD
(7-7-4 6)40.60
14th ra c e -1 / 0 . A: 14.70
4 Gypsy H
13 00 0 00 7 00
7 Bott Sonova
It 40 14 00
1 Antique Crystal
4 00
a (2-4) 64.60 P 64 7) 111.60 T (4-2-1) 7M.0O S
(4-1-1-6) 4114.40
A — l. l l t j H—0146,167

170

100

1to
100
100

0.00

At Orlande Seminole
Wednesday night
First game
1 Cablole
11.70 6 40 4 40
6 60 170
7 Aguirre
100
7 Pinson
Q (1-1) 11.40 P i l l ) 64.00 T (1-1-7) 106.60
Second gome
1 Fries Reyes
17 40 4 70 4 00
6 Pile Jose
6 60 10 70
7 Cebiole Andy
0 00
Q (7-4) 77.00 P 12-4) 104.10 T (2-0-71 1704.40
D D ( ! 1)100.04
Third gome
I Marcel Azcue
16 40 10 70 4 40
S E rk lile Reyes
* 40 4 70
1 Pile Enrique
5 00
a (5 4) 11.00 P 60-1) 100.60 T (0-1-1) 171.4#
Fourth gome
4 Frias
*60 11.00 0 40
I Gebiote
0 00 5 60
6 Erklrle
160
0(1-4) 42.40 P (4-1) 240.40 T (4-1-0) 007.00
Fifth gome
6 Fries Atcue
1* 70 10 00 7.40
1Gebiolo Aguirre
7.70 1 00
4 Cole Reyes
4 00
0(1-4) 16.40 P &lt;6-11 *7.10 T (4-1-4) 170.60
Siithgem e
lD u ra n yoB ob
4 40 5 40 3 60
7 Said Victor
4 00 1 00
4Mendibe A rreiola
100
Q (17) 17.40 P (1-7) 10.70 T (1-7-4) 1M.60
Seventh gome
1 Pardo
17 00 4 70 2 00
5 Pinson
4 00 4 40
7 Forurle
1 40
Q (1 1) 50.70 P (11) 111.00 T (1-1-7) M l.00
Eighth game
6 Ricardo Andy
17 00 77 40 5 60
1 Pinson Atcue
17 70 4 70
4 Arameyo Victor
1 00
Q (14) 47.7* P (6 1) 107.10 T T (4-1-4) 417.00
Ninth gome
1Mend Ibe urelde
7 00 4 70 4 00
6 Durango Aguirre
14.00 21 70
1 Pardo Reyes
100
Q 114) 11.11 P (1-4 ) 04.00 T (1-4-1) 101.00
Jackpot M74.00
10th game
7 Victor
10 70 10 40 7 00
5 Napa
100 100
1 Mend I
160
QI2 1) 76.40 P (2-1) 46.M T (2-1-1) 700.40
11th go me
1 Said Urelde
4 70 4 00 2 60
1 Durango Victor
5 00 1 00
2 Mendibe Forurle
100
0(1-4) 14.70 P (4-1) M.70 T (4 17) 11040
17th game
1 Said Don
1160 4 40 1 40
4 Nepe Enrique
4JO 160
2 Jugate mend I
1.40
Q 11 4 ) 74 70 P (1-4) 16.10 T 11-4 7) 714.40
Uth game
4 Ricardo Enrique
21.40 * 60 1 70
lO lca Arratola
* 40 7 60
7Surangodon
2 40
Q 1141 *6.60 P 14 1) 17V.00 T (4 17) M7.60 S
(4 11 1)1411.54 DO (14le.ee
A —10411 H —641,414

Nv*

A ll Timet EST
EASTERN CO N FEREN CE
Atlantic Dtvitien
W L Pet.
York
i*
; 4H

OB
-

Orlando
New Jersey
Boston
Philadelphia
Washington
Miami

13 6 .171
i
13 17 520 4
IT 1} 410 5
7 15 111
I'
7 11 210 10
4 II .211 10
Central Division
Chicago
17 7 701
Cleveland
IS 11 577 1
Charlotte
14 It 560 !•&gt;
Detroit
4&gt;&gt;
12 II 57?
Indiana
13 17 570 4&gt;|
Atlanta
11 11 451 6
Milwaukee
7
10 14 417
W EST ER N C O N F E R E N C E
Midwest Division
w
L Pci.
OB
Utah
15 1 15?
Houston
1]
6 561
1'*
San Antonio
tl 11 500 I ' l
Denver
7 It 104 0
Minnesota
5 It 711 6
Dallas
7 16 0*5 l l ' i
Pacific Division
Phoenix
4 •It
II
Seam*
17 7 .701 7
Portland
15 1 157 I ' l
LA Lakers
14 * 606 4'»
LA Clippers
14 10 .511 1
Golden Slate
12 11 410 7»»
Sacramenlo
1 11 111 11
Wednesday's Games
Boston *0. Houston *4
Utah 67, Miami 04
Charlotte 107. Delroil 65
Cleveland 111. Indiana 104
Sacramenlo 101. Minnesota *6. OT
Chicago 107, Washington 60
Phoenix 111, Denver *6
Golden Slate 111. Dallas67
Seattle 00. LA Lakers 76
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
Friday's Games
San Anion lo at LA Clippers. 1 X p m
New York at Chicago. 6 p m.

UTAH 67. MIAMI 06
U TAH (61)
Corbin 4 10 2 7 10. K Malone 10 21 21 21.
Eaton 2 2 0 0 4, J Malone 7-11 12 11. Stockton
3 11 12 1. Humphries 0 5 2 7 7. Brown 5 10 3 1
11. Krytlkowlak 15 66 11. Benoit 1 1 2 7 5
Totals 15 70 If 77*7
MIAMI (06)
Long 11 4 4 10. Rice 1 71 0 0 11. Selkaly 4 14
4 4 14. Coles 1 1 4 4 II. Edwards 7 14 0 0 14.
Shaw 1 2 0 0 2. Salley 1 17 2 4. Burton 0 1 0 0 0 .
Miner 4 10I I* Totals 111717 2106
Utah
74 71 21 24 - 61
Miami
22 24 20 70 - 06
1 Point g o a ls— Utah 1 1 (Benoit I I.
K Malone 1-1, Stockton I 7. Humphries 0 II.
Miami 1 10 (Rice 2 4. Coles 11. Edwards 0 I)
Fouled out— None. Rebounds— Utah 56
(K .M a lo n e 14), M ia m i 41 (Long 11).
Assists— Utah 7* (Stockton 101. Miami II
(Coles 0). Total louls-U tah 20. Miami 72
A — 11,000.

lo o m t—

■Am Bwm m o I

Wednesday's Men's Scares
EAST
Boston College 45. Coppln SI. 51
Colgate 06, Canlslus 77
Gettysburg 1*. Lehigh 11
Maine 50. Bradley 54
Merrimack 11. Keene SI. 45
Niagara 107. Valparaiso so
Pittsburgh 17. Robert Morris 41
Rhode Island**, Hartford47
Seton Hall 05. Adelphl 54
Slena46.Creighton54
St. Peter'sOt. Youngstown SI. 41
Temple 70, Penn St. 41
Yethlva 10. St. Joseph's. N Y. 54
SOUTH
Jdckson Sf. *7. Tulane 04
Maryland 71, Towton St.40
Middle Tenn. 77. Cleveland St. 4*
SW Louisiana 71, Samtoed 42
Shepherd *1, Columbia Union 12
MIDWEST
Bullerol. Ball St. a*
Indiana 105. SI. John's 10
Missouri44. Illinois45
Mo Kansas City 115. Morehead SI. 76
N. Illinois 71. Idaho St. 64
Toledo 12. Chicago SI. 71
WIs. Milwaukee 74. W. Michigan 61
Wisconsin IM. Delroil Mercy 06
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 101. T u lsa lt
Southern Meth. 110. North Texas *4
F A B W EST
Cal St. Fullerton *7. Chapman 71
Fresno St. 71, San Franciscos/
Gontaga 71. E . Washington 50
Idaho04. Seattle 41
Long Beach St. *5. Howard U. 47
Minnesota 17. Santa Claraei
Montana St. 72. Sacramenlo St. 11
Nevada 70. Loyola Marymounl 45
New Mexico 71. New Mexico SI. 64
Pepperdlne 11. George Washington 76
San Diego 71. Cal SI. Hayward 54
Southern Cal 74. Nebraska 64
Washington 74. B Y U Hawaii 41
TO URN AM EN TS
Maui Invitational
Championship
OukeO*. Brigham Young 64
Third Place
Memphis St. 70. LSU64
Filth Place
Oklahoma 100. DePaul 64
Seventh Place
Chamlnado 71. Stanford*}. TOT
Muskingum Christmas T(ornament
Championship
Rio Grande 111. Olivet 15
Muskingum Christmas Tournament
Third Place
Muskingum 01. Malone 40

PreBewt
NEW YORK - Rosters lor the AFC and
N FC teems In the l**J N F L Pro Bowl to be
played In Honolulu on Feb 7)
A FC
Offense
Wide Receivers — Anthony Miller. San
Diego; Haywood Jeflires. Houston; Andre
Reed. Buffalo. Curtis Duncan. Houston.
Ernest Givins. Houston
Tackles Richmond Webb. M iam i;
Howard Ballard. Buffalo. Will Wolford
Buffalo
Guards — Mike Munchak. Houston. Steve
Wisniewski. Lot Angeles Raiders. Carlton
Heselrlg. Pittsburgh
Centers — Bruce Matthews. Houston;
Dermontll Dawson. Pittsburgh
Tight Ends — Keith Jacksan. Miami; Marv
Cook. New England
Quarterbacks — Dan Marine. Miami;

Warren Moon. Houston; Jim Kelly. Buffalo
Running Backs — Barry Foster. Pit
Itburgh; Thurman Thomas. Buffalo; Lorenro
While. Houston; Harold Green. Cincinnati
Detente
Ends — Bruce Smith, Buffalo; Leslie
O Neal. San Diego; Nell Smith. Kansas City
Interior Linemen — Corlet Kennedy. Seal
lie; Ray Childress. Houston
Outside Linebackers — Derrick Thomas.
Kansas City; Bryan Cox. Miami; Cornelius
Bennetl. Buffalo
Inside linebackers — Junior Seau. San
Diego; Al Smith. Houston; Michael Brooks.
Denver.
Cornerbackt — Rod Woodson. Pittsburgh.
Gill Byrd. San Diego. Terry McDaniel. Lot
Angeles Raiders
Safeties — Henry Jones. Buffalo. Sieve
Atwaler, Denver; Eugene Robinson. Seattle
Specialists
Punter — Rohn Stark. Indianapolis.
Kicker — Nick Lowery. Kansas City
Kick Return Specialist — Clarence Verdin.
Indianapolis
Special Teamer — Sieve Tasker, Buffalo
NFC
Often te
Wide Receivers — Jerry Rice. San Fran
cisco; Sterling Sharpe. Green Bay; Michael
Irvin. Dallas; Andre Riton. Atlanta
Tackles — Gary Zimmerman. Minnesota.
Lomas Brown, Detroit; Sieve Wallace. San
Francisco*
Guards — Randall McDaniel. Minnesota;
Guy McIntyre. San Francisco; Nate Newton.
Dallas
Centers — Joel Hllgenberg. New Orleans.
Mark Slcpnoskl. Dallas
Tight ends — Jay Novacck. Dallas: Brenl
Jones. San Francisco
Quarterbacks — Sieve Young, afert; Troy
Alkman. Dallas; Bretl Favre. Green Bay.
Running backs — Em m ltl Smith. Oallas;
Barry Sanders. Delroil; Ricky Wellers. San
Francisco; Rodney Hampton. New York
Glan«t
Defense
Ends — Reggie While. Philadelphia. Chris
Dolem an, M innesota; Clyde Simmons.
Philadelphia.
Interior Linemen — Pierce Holt. San
Francisco; Henry Thomas. Minnesota
Outside linebackers — Pat Swilling. New
Orleans. Rickey Jackson, New Orleans
Wilber Marshall. Washington
Inside linebackers — Sam Mills. New
Orleans. Jessie Tuggle. Atlanta; Vaughan
Johnson. New Orleans
Cornerbackt — Deion Sanders. Atlanta:
Audrey McMilllan. Minnesota; Eric Allen.
Philadelphia
Safeties — Tim McDonald, Phoenix. Chuck
Cecil. Green Bay; Todd Scott. Minnesota
Specialists
Punter — Rich Camarillo. Phoenix
Placekicker — Morten Andersen. New
Orleans
Kick Return Specialist — Mel Gray.
Delroil.
Special Teamer — Eiberf Shelley. Atlanta

l
A M E R IC A N FO O TB A LL C O N F E R E N C E
Quarterbacks
Att Cam Yds TD Ini
111 711 7441 17 12
Moon. Hou
111 106 1166 24 II
Marine. Mie.
O Donnell. Pit.
111 111 7711 13 6
453 214 1410 21 II
Kelly. But
111 211 2616 u It
Krleg. K C
440 755 1211 i* II
Humphries. S D.
211 117 3014 6 IS
Elway. Den.
Schroeder. Ral
741 It* 1415 II 10
264 110 1617 7 15
George.Ind
Etlason.CIn,
177 114 1607 It 15

Foster. Pil
T. Thomas. But.
While. Hou
Green. Cln
Werren. See
Higgs, Mia.
Butts. S O
Dickerson. Rai
Baxter. NY J
Green. Den

Rushers
Att Yds Avg
114 1517
2*4 1160
2a iiio
?5i t in
711 651
247 161
705 745
117 776
152 161
14* t i l

LG TD
4 4 46 10
6
4 7 44
4 7 44 7
4 4 51 2
7
4.4 5?
1.6 11 7
16 77 1
1.6 40 7
44 X) 1
4.1 *7 2

Receivers
He Yds Av«
LO TO
14 M7 10 1 47 1
Jeltlres. Hou
1
Duncan. Hou
76 *11 11 1 72
1
Harmon, S D
71 117 117 55
7
66 501 7.1 7/
Williams. See
144
7
66 6*4
47
Miller. S O
65 711 II* 41 10
Givins. Hou
1
60 170 14 5 51
Reed. Bui
t
17 740 110 14
Langhorne, Ind
t
55 61* 11.3 46
White. Hou
T. Thomas. But.
55 *11 ' 11.2 41 1
Punters
Gr. Montgomery. Hou
Slark.lnd
Tuten, Sea
Royals. Pit
Gotten. Ral.
Kidd. S O
Barker. K C.
Johnson, Cln.
Hansen. Cle
Mohr. Bui

NO Yds LG Avg
41 21*1 64 45 *
7* 1575 64 45 1
104 4501 65 44 1
46 7651 50 42 V
74 1164 5* 47 1
64 7711 65 42 1
4* 7*46 41 47 7
74 1111 44 47 0
71 7*67 71 41 1
54 711* 41 41.0

Punt Returners
NO Yds Avg
LG TD
Vtrdln. Ind
74 764 11 7 14
2
Carter. K C.
11 16* II.1 16 7
Marshall. Den
11 117 10* 41 0
t
Woodson. Pil
11 21* 101 *0
Brown. Ral
16 17* 104 40 0
74 760 too 42 0
Hicks. Bui
1
42 417 6* 75
Melcall, Cl*.
17 720 I I 50 0
Stanley. S D N.E.
«
Miller, Mia.
12 171 7.7 If
Btaniemy, S O.
X 77* 7.1 71 0
Kicked Returners
NO Yds Avg
LG TD
I
Vaughn. N E
If 164 71 4 too
X 475 72 5 47 0
Baldwin. Cle
41 0
70 411 M l
Ball. Cin.
Verdin. Ind
17 717 20 5 4? 0
Williams. K C
11 405 16 1 17 0
1? 0
Woodson. Pll
21 411 16.1
McMillan. NY J
.
7? 416 16 0 45 0
Warren. Sea
71 514 11 7 14 0
Stanley. S D N E
76 526 t l 7 40 0
12 0
Mathis. NY J
77 466 171
Scaring
Touchdowns
TD Rush Rec Ret
12 6 1 0
T Ihomet. Bui
Foster. Pit
10 10 0 0
Givins. Hou
10 0 10 0
Culver, Ind
1 4
2 0
Jackson Den
1 0
1 0

72
60
60
46
a

Jetllret. Hou
Miller. S O
While. Hou
Du per. Mia.
Higgs, Ml*.
Metcalf. Cle.

1
1
1
7
7
7

0
0
7
«
7
t

1
7
I
7

0
t
0
0
e
t

48
48
48
43
42
47

Kicking
PAT FO LO
Stoyanovkh, Mia.
11 11 77-14 11
0 44 71 71 54
Christie. Bui
G Anderson. Pll.
27 7* 25 11 4*
Carney. S D
13 31 71 7* 50
Lowery. K C
11 31 72 74 52
Del Greco. Hou
10 10 If 75 54
70 2* 16 77 51
Stover. Cle
Breech. Cln
26 76 II 74 41
Treadwell. Den
74 74 11 77 44
Jaeger. Rei.
25 25 15 26 54

Pts
114
112
102
107
*6
65
15
11
10
70

a
i

NATIONAL FO O TB A LL C O N F E R E N C E
Quarterbacks
AH Cam Yds TO Int
Young. S F.
144 254 1112 25 7
Alkman. Dal.
452 262 11*7 71 14
Miller. All
751 15? 1716 IS 6
Favre. G B
414 276 1040 11
Cunningham. Phi
141 772 7650 11 It
Hebert. N O
167 225 1101 If
Chandler. Pho
170 272 2566 15 17
Everett. Rams
457 770 111] 27 17
Peel*. Del
Harbaugh. Chi

to
13

211 121 1707 *
151 702 7416 11

E Smith. Dal.
B. Sanders. Del.
Cebb. T.B.
Hampton. NY G
Allen. Min
Gary, Rams
Walters. S F
Walker. Phi
Byner. Wat
Johnson. Pho

Sharpe. G B
Riton. All
Rice. S F
Irvin. Dal
Pritchard. All
Barnett. Phi
Novacck. Dal
E Martin. N O
Perrlman, Del
Clark. Wat

Rushers
AH Yds Avg
151 1512
262 1241
766 1164
745 1106
746 UOt
256 102*
701 661
751 664
241 661
151 *41

LG TD
45 61 17
4 1 55 9
1.6 2« 9
4 5 *1 14
4 5 51 17
4 0 61 7
9
4 6 4]
11 14 8
16 71 6
4 1 42 6

Receivers
No Yds Avg
LG
102 1416 12 6 76
86 1015 17 0 71
79 111* 14 4 60
73 1250 II 5 s;
70 745 10 6 11
66 1061 1* 7 71
6S 561 6 1 14
63 *47 15 0 57
63 71? 17 4 40
59 141 14 4 47

TD
13
10
to
7
4
6
6
S
4
5

Pvnftrt
Newsome. Min
Bernhardt. N O
Land*la NY G
Arnold. Del
Camarillo. Pho
Saxon. Dal
Gardockl. Chi
Feagles. Phi
Rodriguei. Den NY G
Fulhage. Atl

1NO Yds LG Avg
66 1102 14 45 0
65 7161 67 44 0
51 2117 71 41 7
60 7606 62 41 5
SI 7206 7] 41 1
56 2511 50 42 6
72 1007 61 42 6
75 1166 60 47 6
1* 1647 55 47 7
61 2616 54 41 5

Punt Returners
LO
NO Yds Avg
Bailey. Pho
70 761 11 7 65
Slkahema. Phi
11 417 12 7 •7
Marlin. Dal
19 415 17 4 79
Parker. Min.
76 11? 101 47
Buckley. G B
71 711 10 0 SI
Mitchell. Was
71 774 6 1 84
Maggelt. NY G
75 775 60 39
Grant. S F
76 &gt;1? • 7 46
Turner. Rams
71 707 7 4 73
Newman. N O
77 15? 7.1 11
Kicked Returners
NO Vdti Avg
LO TD
14 646 27.1 66 2
Sanders. Att.
Bailey. Pho
71 660 74 6 61 0
1
Gray. Del
47 1006 74 0 16
Meggell. NY G
70 455 7? 1 67
1
Lewis. Chi
70 446 77 5 6?
1
Nelson. Min
71 624 27 1 51 0
Logan,S.F
70 441 72.1 12 0
C Harris. Hou G B
11 65? 71 0 50 0
Howard. Was
2? 467 71 0 42 0
Mitchell. Wat
70 470 21 0 47 0
Scaring
Touchdowns
T D Rush Rec Ret
i
E. Smith. Dal
0
II 17
Allen. Min
14 tl
7 0
Hampton. NY G
14 14 0 0
Sharpe, G.B
11 0 11 0
tl
Anderson, Chi.
5 6 0
11
1 10 0
Rlc*.S F.
Walter*. S F .
It
6 7 0
7 1 0
Gary. Rams
to
Riton. All.
10 a 10 0
10 9 1 0
B. Sanders. Del.
Walker. Phi
10 i
7 0

Andersen. N O
Lohmlller. Wat.
Elliott. Del
Coter.S.F.
Jecke. G B
Revolt. Min
Butler. Chi
Hanson. Del
Johnson. Atl
Ruiek. Phi.

Pts
10*
14
04
76
66

66
66

60
60
60
60

Kicking
PA T F G LG Pts
11 17 77 17 52 112
71 71 70 16 51 112
44 45 77 17 53 110
50 51 17 25 46 101
7* 7* 27 7* 51 65
47 42 17 77 52 6}
12 12 I* 26 50 16
30 X 1* 24 57 17
14 14 16 20 54 14
10 47 14 77 50 10

Team Statistics
T O TA L YA R D A G E
AM ER IC A N FO O T B A LL C O N F E R E N C E
O FFEN SE
Pats
Yards Ruth
5454 7786 1147
Bullalo
Houston
3446
5370
1521
lira
Miami
1411
17J6
4110
1777 1101
San Diego
Pittsburgh
45*1 7051
7547
4156
New York Jels
1667 75*7
41*6
1417 771?
Cleveland
Denver
4140
1415 7725
4104
147? 741?
KantasCily
Indianapolis
4070 1010 1040
1444 7154
L A Raiders
4007
Cincinnati
1776 1144
3475
New England
1105
1171
1*17
Seallle
1440 1574
3014
DEFENSE
Yards Rush Past
San Diego
M46
1776 2410
Houston
1674
7417
m i;
Kansas City
40J4
1705 717*
L A Raiders
4771
15*4 2417
424?
Seattle
1171 7421
Miami
41*4 1471 1M1
4116
1788 3021
Bullalo
4141
Pittsburgh
1771 2444
Cleveland
444*
1507 7647
1174 7774
New York Jett
4400
4711
New England
111? 7*41
4710 1*77 7*02
Indianapolis
Denver
1601 7640
4141
Cincinnati
5015
1615 1170
NATIONAL F O O TB A LL C O N F E R E N C E
O FFEN SE

ConsolationC o n tin u e d f r o m IB
"Ollier team s arc {joln{j
slow
the {tunic down against us." said
Tralna. "We just have to lie
ready In handle II."
Ahhntt. a (Moot. IMncIi junior
eenler. led llie C ou g ars (now 4-H
on the season) wllli 15 points.
Includhitt live ol live from (lie
cha rily slri|w Also In double
ll{*ures was O’C allahan with 12.
S eniinole's Deon Daniels eontin n e d lo Im press with Ills play
a n d is q u ic k ly easla h llsh liiK
himself a s o n e o l the Im-sI players
In llie are a T he ju n io r forwuid
drop|K*d In a {jame hi{*h 1Ci
|Kiinls. (he only Arrow Force One
player lo re a c h double fi|*urcs.
S o p h o m o re Erie Holn-rls added
six |Miinls a n d s e n io r Mall P arker
had live lor S em inole, now 3-8

THIRD PLA C E
LAR G O 76. SOUTH D AD E 67
Htaleah Suuth Dade (67)
F u k h 100 2. Allen 40 01. H a tie ll7 71. Brandt 7 004. Russell 100
10. G o d in 0 00 0. Terry 4 12*. Vega 4 7 1 10. Phillips 4 0 01 . Ellis 0
0 00. LaltimoreOO 00. Barber 00 00 Totals 105 7*;
Large (741
Gilbert 5 14 11. Lescot- 100 1. Redding 4 7 4 II. Haros II I 1 77.
Bow ertOl 43. Pritchett 71 5 17. Ryno 10 22 Totals 11 10 72 74
South Dade
II 14 || |7 — *;
Largo
1} 20 » I* - 74
three point field goals — South Dade 7 (Russell 2). Largo 2
(Letcoc Reddmgl Team fouls — South Dade l*. Largo*. Fouled out
— none Technicals — non* Records — South Dade I 5. Largo 7 7

O H l i l t ' h c a s o il.

Kevin Hart m ade die most ol
Ins lirsi Mail tor Moure Couiiiy
(6-5) ati lie lied leummuU" Jason
W a r m e r with a name high 14
|Ntliils. Jell Norman cam e o il llie
lieneli lo till six slralnlit free
throws lu the Itual period lo help

F IF T H P L A C E
M OORE COUNTY, TN. 47. T ITU SV ILLE *1
CtwAtfi Til, (42)
Martin I 0 i 1. Waggoner * I 7 14. Harder 0 0 10. Hart 7 00 14.
Whtlaker 0 0 0 0. Norman 1 44 0. Poke 0 0 0 0. M Fanning 1 0 0 1
Flelcher0000. FowlerOOOO Totals 1*7 10 42
Titusville (41)
Jo* 10 04. Jones 40 0*. SappOOO 0. Reddeclitf 0 000. Tegyc I 0 0
7. Denton 1 1 4 *. Gabrych 7 1 1 7 . Bolen 1 0 7 4. Lawrence 1 0 0 2
Totals 17**41
Moor* County
11 1* 1 1 1 - 4 7
Titusville
10 t) 11 4 - 41
Three point field goals — Moore County 1 (Martin. Waggoner. M
Fanning), Titusville I (Jones) Team fouls — Moor* County IS
Titusville 15 Fouled out — Tllusvlll*. Jo* Technicals — non*
Records — Moore County * 5. Tilutvill* 5 5

die Kulderti lop llie Terriers.
Daniel J o n e s a n d l.eou Denson
paced Titusville (5-.r&gt;) with nine
points each.
F resh m an forward Erie Harris
led four lair{&lt;o players Into d o u ­
ble If{jures wllli 27 |&gt;olnts a s die
P ackers (7-2) ea rn e d die ililrd

place trophy. Also In double
li{fures w ere C’o rlez P ritchett
wllli 17 jMiluis ,m d Pedro Weddint; and Cedric OIIImti with 1 1

each.
Uusscll Stacey led S ou th Dade
(8-5) wllli IH |&gt;oinis. while Corey
Vetja tallied 10

Y a rd s Rush
5114
2217
194?
5257
4146
104)
4644
1461
4601
4565
1676
1577
4575
4511
1676
4576
1511
4460
1166
4457
1165
4774
1171
1505
4711
4117
2010
DEFENSE
Y trd i Ruih
3841
1716
Dallas
3903
New Orleans
1549
Washington
4056
4177
1414
Philadelphia
4304
1704
Minnesota
1779
San Francisco
4560
1769
4598
Chicago
Green Bay
4651
1656
4697
Delroil
1743
4747
1814
New York Giants
Tampa Bay
4837
ISIS
4886
Phoenix
5079 7149
L A Rams
Atlanta
5773 7176
San F ra n c isc o
D a lla s
Chicago
Philadelphia
L A Rams
Washington
Green Bay
Tam pa Bay
New O rlean s
Atlanta
Minnesota
Phoenix
D e tro it
New York Giants

7161

1550

1605

P a ts
1617

1110

1006
7491
1110
7667
1046

2115

7661
177?
2567
7*51
770*
7177
P ats
2675
7151
7507
7761
7600
17*1
7676
7665
7654
76J1
1277
1781
7610
1147

COLLIQB FOOTBALL
All Timet EST
Friday, Dec. 71
Blue Gray Classic
At Montgomery, Ala
Noon (ABC)
Aloha Bowl
At Honolulu
Kansas 17 41 vs Brigham Younq (6 4). 1 10
p m (ABC)
Tufidav, Dec. 1*
Copper Bowl
At Tucson. Aril
Washington State IIII vs Utah (6 5) 8
p m (ESPN!
Freedom Bowl
Al Anaheim, Calif.
Southern Cal (6 4 II vs Fresno Stale 16 41
*p m (Raycom)
Wednesday. Dec. 10
Holiday Bowl
A l San Diego
Hawaii (10 21 vs Illinois (6 4 11. 8 p m
(ESPN)
Thursday. Dec. 21
Independence Bowl
At Shreveport, La.
Wake Forest (7 4) vs Oregon (6 51. 12 10
p m (ESPN)
John Hancock Bowl
At E l Paso, Texas
Arizona (6 4 II vs Baylor (6 51. 2 10 p m
(CBS)
Gator Bowl
At Jacksonville
Florida (141 vs Norlh Carolina Stale
(6 2 11.* p m (TBS)
Liberty Bowl
Al Memphis, Tenn.
Air Force (7 4) vs Mississippi (I l l . l p m
(ESPN)
Friday. Jan. 1
Hall ol Fame Bowl
At Tampa
Boston College (12 1) vs Tennessee (11).
11 a m (ESPN)
Cotton Bowl
A l Dallas
Texas A I M (12 0) vs Notre Dam* (6 I 11. I
p m (NBCI
Citrus Bowl
A l Orlando
Ohio State (1 2 1) vs Georgia (6 l l . l p m
(ABC)
Blockbuster Bawl
At Fort Lauderdale
Penn Stele (7 4) vs Stanford (6 3). I 30
p m. (CBS)
Fiesta Bowl
A l Temp*. Aril.
Syracuse (92) vs Colorado (9 I II. 4 30
p m. (NBC)
Rose Bowl
At Pasadena, Calif.
Michigan (10 1) vs Washington 16 2). 4 45
p m (ABC)
Orange Bowl
At Miami
Nebraska (6 7) vs. Florida State (to t), 1
p m (NBC)
Soger Bowl
Al New Orleans
Alabam a(l2 0) vs Miami (II 0), 8 30 p m
(ABC)
Seturdfy, Jen. 2
Peach Bowl
At Atlanta
North Carolina ( 1 1) vs. Mississippi Stale
(7 4 | .tp m .(E S P N )
Saturday, Jan. 6
Japan Bowl
Tokyo
7p m. (ESPN)
Saturday. Jan. 16
Senior Bowl
Mobil*. Ale.
2 p m . (ESPN)
Hula Bowl
At Honolulu
1 p m (NBC)
Saturday. Jan. 23
Easi-West Shrine Clastic
Al Stanford, Calif.
4p m. (ESPN)

-1 1 1 )
All T im tt EST
W ALES C O N F E R E N C E
Patrick Division
. W L T Pts GF GA
Pittsburgh
25 6 3 51 170 176
Washington
16 14 2 40 IM 111
NY Rangers
11 11 4 40 145 112
New Jersey
17 15 l IS MO III
NY Islanders
15 1* 4 14 14? 115
Philadelphia
It 11 4 7* I ll 116
Adams Drvitian
Montreal
21 12 4 46 152 172
Boston
70 II 2 47 110 115
Quebec
II 1? * 4? 151 147
Bullalo
15 14 4 16 157 174
Hertford
It 70 3 75 107 147
Ottawa
1 11 1 6 10 171
CAM PBELL CONFERENCE
Nerns Division
W L T Pit GF GA
Chicago
70 1? 4 44 12? *;
Detroit
II 14 1 39 151 116
Minnesota
17 12 j 39 115 106
Toronto
11 15 S 31 106 117
Tampa Bay
14 21 7 70 176 141
St. Louis
It II S 77 117 115
Smyth# Division
Calgary
21 10 4 41 141 no
70 11 4 44 157 l?V
Los Angeles

Vancouver
Edmonton
Wmnlpcq
San Jose

70 10 1 41 151 10?
11 U i H 102 140
12 16 1 77 II? 137
176 1 II 107 179
Wednesday's Games
Hartford 1, Tampa Bay 1
Huflalo 4. Washmqlon I
Chlcaqo4.0ll,iwa7
New York Islanders*. Montreal 7
New Jersey 5 New York Ranqersa OT
Pitlsburqh 4. Philadelphia©
Calgary 4, Winnipeg 1
Edmonton 4. San Jose 2
Thursday's Games
No games sc hedulcd
Friday's Games
No qames scheduled
Saturday’s Games
Boston al Hartford 7 40p m
Ottawa at Quebec. 7 aopm
New York Ranqi-rs al New York Islanders
7 40 p in
Philadelphia at Washmqlon, 7 40 p m
Winnipeq al Minnesota, 8 10pm
Detroit at Toronto 8 10 p m
SI Louis at Chicago, 6 40pm
Los Angeles al San Jose, 10 40 p m

NHL SUMMARIES
H A R TFO R D 3. T A M PA BAY 1
Tampa Bay
1 0 0 — 1
Hartford
0
3 0 — 3
First Period — 1 T*»mp.i B«iy. Ch.imtwr* 3
(Rnrndqe Konfos) 13 V (pp) Penalties —
Konroyd Mar (tnppmq). 5 Of. P ctrovicky
Heir, irr,*|or q.irno m isc o n d u c t (hiqh
sticking), 13 04
Second Period — ? Hartford Stsnderson 16
(YaVe. Craven). 7 13 (pp). 3 Hartford
Poulin 10 (Y.ikcv Zalapski). IS 47 (pp). 4
Hartford. Poulin It (Cmven. Verbeek), 17 5?
Penalties — Tamp.i Hay bench served by
Kontos (too many men). SS Chambers. TH
(hoidmq). 8 34 Hamrlik. TH iholdmq stick)
14 37. Bradley. TH (cross checkmq). 18 S4
Reekie TH (rouqhmq) 18 S4 Kypreos Heir
l roughing). 18 S4
Third Period — None Penalties — Br.idley
TH (holding). 6 70 J.inssens. Har (holding)
6 20 Hradley. TH (high sticking). 8 14
Hradtcy. TH (unsportsmanlike conduct).
It 57 Kypreos Har (interference). IS 10
Shots on qoal — Tampa Hay 17 3 S 70
Hartford 8 9 S 71
Power play Opportunities — Tamp.i H.iy I
ot 4 Har llord 1 of t
Goalies
T.tmpa Ha* J.tblonski 7 9 7 177
shots 19 saves)
Hartford Burke 9 17 j
(70 19)
A — 10 740
Referee — Dlame Angus Linesmen —
Kevin Collins Hritin Murphy

TV/RADIO
B A S EB A LL
9 p m — SUN. Maior League All Stars vs
Japanese All Stars Game 3
B A S K E T B A LL
3 30 a m
ESPN. Maui Invitational
championship. Duke vs Brigham Young
GOLF
Midnight - SUN. Mtchelob Skins Classic
MOTORSPORTS

3pm —SUN. World Supcrbtke

SOCCER
4am
SUN. NCAA Tournament semifi
nal Duke vs Virginia
VOLLEYBALL
Midnight — ESPN. College women. NCAA
Tournament first semifinal
Radio
M ISCELLAN EO US
S p in — W G T O A M (540). Sports Huddle
6 p m - W PR D AM 11440). Sports Beat
6 pm
W W N Z A M / F M (740 104 I)
SportsTalk
6 pm
- W G T O A M (540). T alk Sports
With Pete Ruse

P la y
Exciting
H iah Paying
Twin Triracta
Nighty 7 30 p m.
Matinees 100pm.
Mon., Wed , S*.
Closed Sunday

Thun. Ladies' Night
•Fro* Admission
Special Group
Packages Available

BET MIAMI HORSES

TUES.SAT.
12:30 PM

POMPANO HARNESS
RACING
W-SAT. 7:30 PM
SANFORD ORLANDO
K E N N E L CLUB
Sorry Ytou M utt Bo 18
North o l O rlando, ju tt off Hwy. 17-92
301 Dog T rack Rd., Longw ood

831-1600
U .S .

SAVINGS
iHt GREAT AMERICAN
INVE.’l vli NT

ACTION! THRILLS! WINNING!

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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Oec-'mt

r-

People
Staying warm this winter

IN B R IEF

Prepare for cold weather without spending a fortune

Sanford Rotarians to meet
Rotary Club of Sanford m e e ts every Monday at noon, nt the
Sanford Civic Center.

W inter Is here a n d m a n y residents In
Central Florida could find their energy
budget Increasing dram atically. T h is cost
c a n be re d u c e d s ig n ifican tly If a few
prep ara tio n s arc m ade.
Maintenance of Ealatlng System — The
first thing we ca n do is tighten u p the
b u ild in g e n v e lo p e by c a u lk in g ,
w e atherstripping a n d ad ding attic Insula­
tion. a s appropriate. Air InflltraHon aro u n d
c rack s Increases both heating a n d cooling
costs. C aulking ca n seal crack s w here (wo
stationary surfaces m eet, such a s a window
fram e with a wall, or w here pipes and d ra in s
ex it t h r o u g h t h e wall. A good g ra d e
sllieone-bascd or silicone latex-based caulk
Is best for the long-run. Any building supply
house provides instru ctio n s on how to use a
caulking g u n properly.
W eatherstripping Is used to seal m oving
parts, su ch a s exterior doors, altlc accesses
w in d o w a n d s lid in g g la s s d o o rs .
W eatherstripping corncs In a variety of
m aterials su c h a s m etal, vinyl, felt, ru b b e r
or foam and can be pu rc h ased by the foot or
In a kit.
Adding Insulation to y our attic ca n reduce
both heating and cooling costs, especially If
the Insulation level Is currently below R-19
o r less th a n six Inches thick. Cellulose

Help for child support enforcement
Association for Children for Enforcem ent of S upport. ACES,
will meet the second an d fourth Monday of each m onth. 7 p.m.
at th e Sem inole C ou n ty Library, Casscllx-rry b ra n ch . S.R. 4 3 6
a n d Oxford Road. Meetings are free. Call 2G3-583H for m ore
Information.

Narcotics Anonymous meets In Sanford
Narcotics A n o n y m o u s m eets Monday at H p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Avc., Sanford.

Poets to talk verse
First Florida Poets m eet at 10 a.m . every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets arc welcome,

Help for gamblers offered
G am blers A n o n y m o u s a n d Gnm-Anon for family and friends,
meet separately Monday a n d Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p.m.. C hu rch of the Good S h ep h erd . 331 Lake Avc.. Maitland.
For m ore Information, call 236-9206.

Cancer support group meets
S upport. Hope and Recovery. S.H.A.R.. m eets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p.m. at C entral Florida Regional Hospital In the
far corner of the dining room. T his Is a self help support group
for all c a n cer survivors, w h e th e r In trea tm e n t now or finished
with It. (.’all 324-H737 or 322-7785 for m ore Information.

fessional a s sistan ce . A professional will
clean the co m b u stio n v en ts or c h im n e y
Inspect and clean the h e a tin g s u rfe rs,
ch a n g e the filter, inspect a n d lubricate the
blower motor, a n d cheek the hells for
tig h tn e ss or wear.

CONSUMER
FOCUS

BARBARA
HUGHES/
GREGG

P urchasing a N ew S y s t e m — There are a
n u m b e r of factors that should he considered
prior to purchasing a new heating system .
\
In m aking co m parisons ol various heating
system s, su ch things a s lutilal e q u ip m en t
Insulation Is o ne of the better Insulations for cost, fuel costs and efficiency, e n v iro n m e n ­
do-it-yourselfers. It Is m ade from recycled tal, Im p ac ts a n d h e a tin g re s p o n s e s or
p a p e rs treated to m a k e II fire re ta rd an t a n d recovery need to be considered. E quipm ent
b u g resistant. If insullatlon is needed, add costs not only vary betw een heating sy stem
en o u g h so th a t th e full d epth Is at least eight types, but ca n also vary significant Iv within
o r n l n e Inches.
th e sa m e type of heating equip m en t d e p e n ­
While y o u 're In the attic, check air d u c ts d in g on size and efficiency, hi m an y eases
lo sec If they a r e well sealed a n d Intact. the ex tra m o n ey paid for a m ore efficient
Many utilities subsidize a blower door test m odel can be rccovrrcd Itt three in live y ears
which can pinpoint leakages In the house th ro u g h energy savings. Most e x p e rts r e ­
a n d ductw ork. They also offer rebates for co m m en d that a n Investm ent in energy
re p a irin g a n d s c a lin g th e h o m e. T a k e efficiency be recovered wttliln seven years.
a d v a n ta g e or these program s; experience T h is m e a n s that if you pay an e \ t t a $ 5 0 0 for
show s that over 6 0 percent of hom es have a m ore efficient model, you should save
serious duct leakage o r infiltration pro­ • 5 0 0 In energy costs within seven y ea rs to
blems.
m a k e it worthwhile economically. In colder
H eating s y s te m s should also be tu n ed u p n o rth e rn and Central Florida iln-se savings
a n n u a lly . M Is probably best to get pro­ arc possible with m an y m odels

Elimination process leaves no guest list
DEAR ABBT: T h e letter In
y o u r colum n abotil the w om an
w ho w anted to elim inate fur-coal
w earers from her party b e m u s e
she w as nntl-fur s tru c k a note
with us. We're p lanning an open
house, and it caused us lo lake a
closer look at o u r guest list.
We plan to Invite 7 0 people
S in c e w e 'r e s t a u n c h R e ­
publicans, we decided to elim i­
nate the Democrats. Thai Icli 3 6
people.
Since w e believe In w i n k i n g
hard at m arriage, we e l t m i n a l e d
the divorced couples. Thai left
17 people
Since w e’re t ’alliolle. we rllm
inHtcd uoii-Catlinllrs. I hat Irlt
13 people.

ADVIC1

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

IN THE SPIRIT IN ILLINOIS

Since we're against altortion.
we eliminated two women.
Sliu • w&lt; ie against Itomqsrx
unlit \ t hat l&lt; il nine
W« liiiitnalcd couples living
tu g clI" i , tIt.*I I' ll Ini
Anil we 1 1 rlalnly didn't want
ally foieigtiets so t hat lelt | wo.
It's going In he a small patty.

P.S. Abby. this is tru e — w e’re
going to Itavr o u r open h o use
anyw ay, so don't use m y n a m e
in everybody will h r looking at
•-;u'li nlli' i trying to figure out
"\v Im's w ho."
DEAR \B BY: In i i s | hmi***- to
'&lt; In .ili d In M em phis." whose
hltilidtiy Is nit Dee 25 a n d w ho
ti It it was tirtfHh for ]ieoplr lo
give him a birthday gift a n d say

Dr. Bill E. Beck (left). S.E. regional director of HPI and immediate
past presldnnl ol Sanlord Kiwartls Club receives a Holstein calf
puppet from Walter Smith, current club president.

Center offers service to help
ease burden of family trauma

Kiwanians send cow
to farmer in Poland

DEAR READERS: H eir we anagain In what lor most ol ns is
the happiest time &lt;&gt;t the year,
with l.irgt m e n s m e s ol lamlly.
lull, and loud s p re ad nvci a
several week period.

SANFORD — A former lit
Poland will iccclve a cow It rim
Ihe Ki w auls C lub ol Sanford.
President Walt S m ith presented
5500 a n d a "sym bolic cow " to
H eifer P r o j e c t I n t e r n a t i o n a l
Soullieust Regional Director Hill
E. Heck on Nov. 25. 1992. Tills Is
lire fifth heifer that the club h as
given.
Heifer Project International, an
approved hucrnalfim al Relations
project of KI w ants International.
Is providing cow s lo small farmlire in Poland a s they receive
5-10 acre sh a re s of the form er
stale farms. T he eows will p ro ­
vide dally m ilk for families,
m an u re to en ric h the fields for
urop production a n d security for
a brighter future. T h is self-help

effort will enable the farm ers to
plan lor their own future an d
cure for their own families.
In 1994. Heller Project will
celebrate 5 0 y ea rs ol helping
h u n g ry lamlltes leed them selves
a n d sh are with their neighbors
by " p a s s in g on the gift" of
anim als. Livestock, training and
aid have been provided lo 110
coun trie s aro u n d the world and
3 5 sta te s here at hom e. Every
farm er who receives help agrees
to " p u ss on the gift" of offspring,
training or support to help n
needy m-lghltor.
P ersons w ho m ight like lo help
th e hun g ry by providing living
gifts th a t keep on giving m ay
call the S o u th e ast Regional Of­
fice in Sanford at 323-5566.

THURSDAY'S
-

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©
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AMC
BET
CNBC
CNN
CTV
(DISC
CIS
i ESPN
EAM
a»

HBO
‘ life
1
&gt;MAX
MTV
NASH
NlCK
’h o s t
SHOW
SUN

UC
IMG

1NT
U SA

VHI
WGN
WON
WTBS

H o w e v e r . Ini l u t n l l l r s in
Iransltloii d ue to d ea th , divorce.
lamlly blending. Jolt loss u r n l h c i
llle-alleiing events, the holidays
rail lit- ail e x h e m e ly stressful
lime. Il Is im portant for p a ie n ls
lo he mindful that this lim e ol
year r a n he a time of em otional
difficulties lor children ns well as
adults. Many children a n d tlicit
paren ts are Icrltng the strain s of
anxiety, depression, anger, and
confusion because of c h a n g e s
th at have occurred d u rin g thc
past year over which they have
little control.
T h e S em in o le C o m m u n ity
Mental Health C enter Is offering
a new service. T h e C hildren’s
R e s o u r c e C e n t e r , to h e l p

" . . . a n d l i t i s is a l s o y o u r
C hristm a s p re sen t."
My suggestion. W h enever one
of these people's hit Ilulu v co m es
aro u n d , even il It’s in .Inly, w hen
you give him tit bet the birth d ay
gift, say, "... a n d this Is also your
C h ristm a s ptesriit
SUM M ER BABY
IN M A R IE T T A . C.A.
DEAR S U M M E R BA B Y :
BeaiiHInd
CONI i D E N f 1A L 1O
LILLIAN 'IN PAI M SPRINGS:
as
It Is will- &lt; i &gt;&gt;i hit ' ' r,|.|
&gt;11 tin emt
a riiiwnw •i -,li&gt;pi
c l......... ml
(iai v. mu i Iiiii I
blgli' i will i Ii it ."I ti li mi; \ t ni s
and Hint. I'lii. wiUi sin |ii l-lug
nil lilcs Hi aln work collies ns
easily tn tin old .' I'llVsiC.ll
exertion t" in- child
' t ) n r is miiiv li'g. 1 I' Irtu .
tow ard it” end ol hm o • ih h
end Is now i goal au t r i1 i it -I
•t&lt; to,iv tie
in w h ich tin
daslu d
GEORGE SAND

hut the two of u s w o n 't have to
lie worried about a n y o n e offen­
ding u s — u nless m y h u s b a n d
sips too m u c h pun ch .
Abby, all kidding aside, of all
the things In this world to worry
about. If fur-coal w e arers are her
m ain concern, sh e h a s too m u c h
tim e on her hands!

DRUG
COUNSELOR
MARY
BALK

children redirect self defeat lug
behaviors and ease I la b u rd e n ol
faintly tra u m a . T h e staff at (InC cnler provides education and
counseling for:
• a d j u s t m e n t to divorce,
separation a n d blended families
• anxiety
• childhood depression
• low self esteem
• recovery from physical a n d
sexual ab u se
• behavioral problem s
• Inappropriate a n g e r
• s u b s ta n c e a b u s e issues

II you arc observing attitu d e s
a n d behaviors hi y o u r rhild(ren)
d u rin g this holiday season Unit
concern you. you m ay want to
contact the C h l l d m i 's Resource
C enter at 339 7641 for a c o n ­
sultation. T he C en ter ts located
behind the Altam onte Mall In the
C ran e s Roost Office Park. 417
W hooping Loop. S u ite 1737.
Altam onte Springs. Counseling
and therapy services arc offered
on a slid in g fee sc a le , a n d
M e d ic a id p a y m e n t s a r e a c ­
cepted.
Support for y o u r children in
crisis and/or transition m ay he
the best gilt you ca n give bath to
them a n d yourself d u rin g this
holdlay season.

'

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PICTURES
p re te n tt

CAPTAINI

NED 1:00 3:00 8:00 7:00 8:00

I kurt russell ^
martin s h o r t y
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1:00 2 :4 5 4 :3 0 6 :1 5 8 :0 0
1:30 3:30
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For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Dec. 18,1992

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1.30 3 30 S M 1 30 9

HRISTMAS DAY

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A D U I I
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1992 - SB

4 6 - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Deoemtoer 24, 1W2

ROUGH...

THE SEED OF FAI

LET US

I • t«« *K. vt '. - gram-

f4iH|« •

IM |' I

a

Calabratlon of lift

iN B R I E F
of* w i n ptim noiywy m

iwoi

LAKE MARY - 8t. Peter's Episcopal Church. 700 Rinehart
1 . invites all to attend both lta Chfldren a NaUvity Pageant
Rd.
with Holy Eucharist beginning a t 7 p m. and Its traditional
midnight service this evening.
The choir will lead choral asinging beginning at 10:30 p.m.
_____ ____
Service begSfkat 11a.m .
On Christm as Day. two Holy Eucharist services with carol
singing a t the 10a.m . service win be held ..
T h e eearly service begins a t S a.m „ followed by Christian
ion fo all ages at 0 a.m.
Nursery will be provided beginning at 0 a.m . through the 10
a.m . sertvce.
For more Inidrmatlon cell ♦44-LORD.

SJOkJn

10 -JO am
M O am

*4P\ hrf• •» ‘ ..7

■"•kssaar""
MOUl

n w F Joswaow

Faa*or

lO J O tm .

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Dad•luay

WaO' 4 Rlsjr

M M icvatwM a

The annual Chrlstmaa celebra­
tion "Lights Of Ufa," sponsored
by BaMwIn-Fairohild Cemeteries
and Funeral Homes, wss a great
this past weekend as
of tne coommunity lit
tho cemetery with over 1,000
luminaries and tnjoyed a live
Nativity, carols and a Rememboranee Tree for loved ones.
Members of tho 8omlnole Soccer
Club, Lake Mary, left, from loft to
right, Joseph Campbell, Chris
Haitman, Philip Kopman, Matt
Crayoe, Chris Ovsrmyer, took a
solemn stanoa as paeserbya
admlrsd thalr performance. A
ohorala group from Holy Cross
Episcopal Church, 8anford, filled
tho air with traditional Christmas

--zSe-''
Chart*L___
Mm

I M H ____

M e m ta flW m N f

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MO pm

MO pm

s s s r

fwmsry rT

Baptist
r*0M».
100 pm.

a ■ •u llA lIjiltllitM
tr
in o w iy i i u n g

ahait
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lAva m i
LAKE MARY — Christian Fellowship Church, United Church
of C hrist, will celebrate C hristm as w ith a com m unity
candlelighting sendee and carol sing on Christm as Eve a t 7:30
p.m. at the Lake Mary Community Building. 360 N. Country
caulb Rd.*
The children of the church will present a special Christmas
PH ^ant and g p g p tta g u a a t wfll e f r e a r l t h e W lg g f e tta e
following the service. Pastor A. A rthur Arvay. on behen of the
‘
all In the community to join In this
For more Information, call 333*31IB.

A Christmas Mtobratlon
LONOWOOD — Rolling HIHs Moravian Church. 1835 W .8.R.
434. wfll celebrate Christm as with a Candlelight Lovefeast this
evening at 4:30 p.m . and again a t 7:30 p.m.
Special music will be presented by the chancel choir and an
offering wfll be received for the South Seminole Christian
Sharing Center.
For Information call the church a t 333*6300.

t

-

Hall fsatursd at Calvary Christisn

IMSam
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SANFORD — Pastors Max and Susan Poole and the
congregation of Calvary Christian Center. West 4th Street.
...........the community
tq attend the worldwide ministry of H.
Invite
coe
Richard Hall on Tuesday and Wednesday at 7 p.m.
For Information call 333*13IB.

Holy Cross plans ssivleas
SANFORDi — Holy Crosa Episcopal Church.,4&lt;0 1 8 . Park Ave.
thie evening wfll b e q s follows; 7 p.m. Christmas Mass: B £0
sm
usic and 10 pan.
o.m. Christmuas
music
o.m. Christ Maas
One Liturgy wfll be held on Sunday a t 8 a m., followed by a
Farewell Party for the Manna a t 10:30 a.m .

Luthsran tavicd i prepared

Y«,»ttip*oU0ft«a4JeimCffl*,tfwSonofaod

SANFORD — The Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. 3335
Oak Art., wfll hold Its Chrtstmaa Eve Candlelight service this
evening a t 7:30 p m . and Christm as Day festival worship is at
10 p m . Friday.
m m S lm A m Bmmamaaajs A a m m la m n m

D R pilS T V flOVKH l I K H V l l
'
LAKE MARY — First Baptist Church Markham Woods. 3400
Markham Woods Rd.. wfll hold Its Teacher Aopredation Day on
Sunday. All taacM rs wfll be recognised In the 10:45 a.m.
The evening service wfll be a t 7 p m .
Nursery provided for all services. For Information, call
333*30B6.
'

AChrtotmaeVIgHMaM
DeBARY — A Cbrtatmaa Vigil Mam will be celebr ated a t St.
A nn's Catholic Church, 36 Dogwood Trail, a t 4:13 p.m. and a
OtWam

IMSam
M#pm.
MSam

Friday, the Sam oa w fllb eat8 and 11 am .
There wfll be a Penance Service on Tuesday beginning a t 7
p m . In the church. ronfsartnna will afoo be heard on
Wednesday from 3:30 to 4 p m . and from 7:30 to 8 p.m. and on
Thursday from 3 to 4 p jn .
.
|f VM p SAB
iM lM m A ii
V
IM NIVUMIWO
For publication of local happenings.

To A dvertU e In This
H rectorr iiC a li323-9811
ThiSwffOf

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Here are meditations based on lyrics from
the Christmas carol "O Little Town of
Bethlehem" (1867). by Phillips Brooks.
This seasonal favorite begins: "O little
town of Bethlehem, / How etfll we see thee
Uel..."
It goes on:
" ... Above Uiy deep and dreamless sleep
Let's consider two words In this Hne of the
carol:
DREAMLESS - Where would most of us
be without our dream s? Dreams are our
vision of a better Ufe. and "where there Is
not vision the people perfeh."
• We don't like to be told, however, that we
are living In a dream world. That auggrats
we are out oftouch with reality.
We want to live in the real world. But
reality has come to aland tor a world of
violence, ooaracnem and cruelty, where
happy e n d in g and Cinderella stortea don't

“
free from th e dtotractioos th a t inhibit
............. _ __
we say our prayers
before we go to steep a t night w ss on to a
truly fruitful Idea.
" "... The silent stars go b y :..."
Jeous knew that Me power came from a
source higher than hhnsstf. "The Son can
do nothing of himself," he acknowledged.
The ooureo he tuvnod to was as high aa the

Jesu s was no dreamer. He lived In the real
Hers is the two-part secret to life:
world, but he found It a world where Ood'e • 1. Recognise your limitations. This is
power. Intelligence and goodness were always the Aret step toward success and
greatness. It la only when we realise that
our resources are ina dequate that we look
No need for unreal
---------- - ,ltV 0 0 ty
i - that the
^ quiet - not agitated or.
Mod thoughts w t
to grow into visibility In our three.
T he thoughts we place In our m inds ju s t
sleep are usually th e m oat
powerful and productive. During sleep, ou r
m inds - the crea tive force w ithin u s - are

3. "Hitch your wagon to a star" - to a
rtF B 1 f# t1 IV D O W C T

i

"Now th ta to the wisdom of m an." said
Emerson, "in every Insta nce of his labor to
hitch hia wagon to a star and see hia chore
done by the gods themselves.... Everything

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y A R E A C H U R C H

HUlhaven
?-,a

Include the
who can be

I or w ritten' _
num ber of •

All

Spirit of a Christm as carol is ours

/ The

everlasting Light:..."
The hum an mind, wonderful as it Is. can
become truly a "dark street" If It Is not
lighted from above - the only way really
th at a street can be Uehted.
It la the Star of Bethlehem that still lights
the street where are live.
This Is the Christmas message:
"The people
oeoole who
:
aat in darkness have
seen a (treat I ..
Or. in the*" words of the hymn. "The
darkness Shall turn to dawning and the
dawning to noonday b rig h t" That is the
Christm as promise.
"... The hopes and fears of all the years /
Are m et in thee tonight"
All of ua are made up of hopes and fears.
Not only the hopes and fears are can put our
finger on this m om ent but "the hopes and
fears of all the years" - of a lifetime.
So now we are to bring our hopes and
fears to Bethlehem - to the place where
Christ la born In us. And what will we find?
Well, w on't we see that the things we have
been hoping for and wishing for all our lives
love, abundance, health and happiness we already have because Christ ("Qod with
ua") means all these things?
*.
And when our fears "m eet" C hrist what
then? They wfll disappear. For as we realise
the truth that Christ came to reveal - that
the good life la ours for the asking - why.
then, there Is no longer anything to fear.
It la In the spirit of the words of this
tre a su re d c a ro l, "O L ittle Tow n of
Bethlehem," that I wish you all a very Merry
Christmas.

D IR E C T O R Y
£ £ YZErnZ S R o w A fe T iw X
M tQ M w tS m Wood* Road, U

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y.a.Mlg A m .. Oo m Ctty.
M a r S a M t* C— w a y fm tm H c* Cowart#*ton* t i t Wada S i.

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KIT »N’ CARLYLE® by Lorry Wri*hl
CHR&amp;T** 4Nb AU

IN T ttt CIRCUIT COURT
P M S C R M N O L I COUNTY,

IN T N t CIRCUIT COURT.
IIO M T C IN T M JU D ICIA L
CIRCUIT. IN ANO POR
IE M IN O L I COUNTY,
FLO RID A.
C A tE N O -w -m iC A -w -p
K U L A K NATIONAL R AN K

2)0— A n tiq u t/ C ljssic
C a rt

sBsagt s T jg a .

922-2611
' HARVtVouJrreNIMITK
* •» . w
. . . «. — -

IB)—Totoviston /
RMHo/StBroo

• 'M C H IV Y convertible., V I.
P.O ., m iner rw«t. complete
car. needs restoration. 112.500

Coil4t79»wo;

2) 1—Cors
TM
EUPPAmiBTS
MM &gt;1ft M fM MDMMI
NOMONETDOWB

fra n M o t, assignees, Honor*.
cred itors, trusted* or ether
cieim ont* cla im mo by, through
anO under C H R IS T IN A 0 .
peck
,
Residence: Unknaem
YOU A R B NOT!P IS O M et an
acHan le larodoea the m H | a | i
en cu m b erin g IKa fa llo w in g

IIS — C o m p v td rs

Fronc* Av. No m ane call*

• COM P U T IN CA R T an roller*.

CdnMsiUsWCws, MI-2123
♦ WMITOINSURANCE* *
PIP/P0 $MOsam

^ E 5 iC P

A O A IM T

Cam p/CoHlslenfull cov. avail.
'IC O N O M T INSURANCE
lte S .H W Y .lfT 2 .

• IO R A L i n Caado w/super
flo o r plan In a re a l area.
Oedte i of lira * . Perfect first
home or lnve*tmonf....&lt;M.OOO.

____________

m -m t ____________

O B U I C K 4 R i t u r y • i*eT
auto. PS. A/C, runs good.
Asking 11400 222 22*4/233 6T44
a C H I V Y CO RVETTE, 2*. T
good condition.
taps,

e W O N D B R P U L H O M I On
large treed lot. fam ily rm.
w/fplc. Cat In A ll. + dining

jBs^atnE
AVO N CNR IIT H A I I

terse

22MI04__________
P FO R O TH U N D IN B IR O . i n .
Runs good, is vin yl lop. Needs
tires. O N LY &gt;266.211-6614

•Vt\% CO U N TRY ESTA T E.

Beautiful 1 3 tplc* Two ito ry
cedar + stone. Has If a ll, Incl.
peed RCDUCCDTO..(16*.NOI

hapS y e lv e s

or Iscledk h o n U h o Court.
A l l c l a im s , o im a n o s
AN D O BJECTIO N S NOT SO
P IL IO W ILL
P O R I VCR

Except ta i. tag. title, etc.
t f f t D E LT A M R O Y A L Auto,
a ir. III! wheel, cruise, power
w indow s, a ir bag. power
locks. A M PM cassette, rear
defrost. O N L Y S2M.3I per
...C all M r. Payne

a Y O U 'LL P A U Id Lav* with
th is L k. M a ry 4/2. Pool,
la c u ill, much more. Discover
a super vaiue. Now.... AI24JOO.

LA O Y M ♦ la lie* In WiNtdi rty
i- - c .

W if i r l H

^aa

—

I W " V W I U t il. M U B

..w natl salary. R e fs it l- m T

Iff—frEtBt Suppllw
a N O T lC I i P I o r l da Ita tu te

I Maaneita ond Alrport
T o n i w h ite puppy.

322-2420

MuaeacurW pCaRIH-—
P IN T OR L E A M / iiP ’TlR N

tiros. g*W Car C raty. 6*0-1*41

321-2720

L t f lil N otteM

E leapt laa, lag. IlfN . etc.
Iia t M ITSUBISHI - 4 door,
a u la . a ir . sta ra a . O N L Y
114**2 par month I
CaM M r. Payne

INTHE CIRCUITCOURT
OP TNI MMJUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. NSAMDPOR
iNote com

IWtJlRjelaP.lfMRl
vbttehf DecatdRar A R

P LOR IDA

___ SDtSHPM-B

■ w n n jn n if H k n

IN R E : T heM arrlaa*at
Eugene Terrell.

UNKNOW N TENANTS i
UNITRD M O RTO AO C

INVtSTMBNn.INC.ITS

Ol RECTORS O P P tC S R L
T R U S T C IS .A N O AO IN T1.
ANO JO H N PO STBR i IP
LI VINO. INCLUOINO A N Y
UNKNOW N SPOUSE OP M ID
D BPR N O A M TIStn** &lt;•*. ;
R EM A R R IED . A N S I*

C R IO IT O R 1 L IIN O R I. AND
TRUSTERS. AND A LL OTHER
PERSO NS CLAIM I NO BY.
THROUGH. UNDCR OR
a g a in s t t h e n a m e d

fantryLakeAK&amp;
CheekList

TMBPUBLICi

OCPHNOANT(S),
U N IT E D M O R T O A O E
V E S T M E N T S .IN C ., IT S
D IR E C T O R S O PPIC R R S,
T R U S T E E S . ANO A O R N T Si
AMO JOHN POSTER] IP LIV
HSR. INCLUOINO A N Y UN­
KNOW N SPOO LS O P SAIO
O E P I N O A N T ( S ) . IP R E M A R R I B O . A N O I P OR
c B A s c a t h e Re s p e c t iv e
U N K N O W N H E I R S . ORV IS IE S . O R A N T B IS .
A jp I R W lE S , C R E D I T O R S .
i

B

✓ Newly remodeled apta.
✓ One and two bedroom
✓ Ask about our 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 month leases
✓ Close to mqjor hwys.
. and thoroughfares
2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

B U P iB R DM N W Y as

S H E f W M *"lo rw U M K 7 T T

Avo* aIiMi

I

TSBSPBSCSSS

hdhaerd. chest. M ld M e
Cost i less. Satt pee. &gt;2 ie e i i
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�8sniofd Hsrsld, Saniord, Florida - Thursday, Oscsmbsf 24, 1tRB

M arines, Legionnaires push
toward Bardera, Hoddur
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s s s ^ ^ t s s r .________W

« * * S 5 ? S H \S
phibtoua fighting machines and
* • “ « • ®f Humvees mounted
t o Hght and heavy machine
ft11.*1* * n d TOW m is s ile s .
Helicopter gunships provided air
co*CT' n .
—
---- . ...
^ m o ti« r ® a y a n o f reporters
ln cars. vans and utility vehicles
followed the Marine battalion
£«"
*th ReglmentM Combat
Team as it rum bled out of
B aldoaat7iI5a.nl.
The Marines were expected to
Bardera a t duakTaeise the
tow n's dirt airstrip and begin
extendl"d *belr control over the
town °* • bout a 00°- About
«.OOO d U p l« rtj» o p te llm in .
«» » P j y «°yM .fc&gt;hetown.
Hoddur is closer to n*1***
B r d .r .. but the j S S
“ fto H E S o S S S S f u T
fre n c h .A m .rtc ™ f o r ® . '. . .
u u n u in u u o u r.w rairein o rai.
taking a roundabout route to
The United States suffered Its avoid mines on the main road. It
first casualty of Operation Re- planned to camp 90 miles outsto re Hope Ju st o u tsid e o f side Hoddur tonight then move
Bardera on Wednesday when a into the town a t sunup.
civilian Army employee was
killed by an anti-tank mine
during a scouting mission.
Three State Deportment secu­
The two rival warlords who
rity officers were hurt in the
control the divided halves of
Mogadishu moved their heavy
As they did In Boidoa and weaponry out of the capital
Mogadishu, the Marines and earlier this week and residents
Legionnaires were to secure were warned that any remaining
Bardera and Hoddur to protect armed vehicles were at risk.
aid convoys from the bandits
and clan militiamen who have
Shortly after the first Marines
ruled the towns with guns for came ashore in Mogadishu, they
weeks. '
.
and the French set up roodFamine across Somalia has blocks In some parts of the city
claimed 350,000 lives and is and began confiscating weapons
threatening 3 million more.
found in vehicles.
BAIDOA. Som alia - More
than 1,000 U.S. Marines and
French Foreign Legionnaires
stream ed out of this central
Somsli town In two convoys
todsy, carrying a C hristm as
nt of hope to more fsmcommunities.
In the capital. Marines set up
roadblocks and began checking
S o m ali v e h ic le s fo r g u n s,
re in tro d u c in g a g e t-to u g h
approach on weapons that they
abandoned Just a few days after
their Dec. 9 arrival.
A reinforced battalion of about
1 000 M ariifeslenBaldos Shortly
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120 m lta to Uk T bu S . WhO.
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of Som alia's roving gunm en
disarmed. But W ashington says
its responsibility is only to en­
sure the security of food aid, and
disarm gunmen while fulfilling
W ashington's hopes th a t a
conventional U.N. peacekeeping
force will swiftly replace the UA.
troops. President Bush hopes to
pull out Americans next month,
and nplltary officials indicate
th e ir goals h e re a re being
quickly m et
In fact Robert Johnston, the
Marine general in charge of U4L
forces In Som alia, says the
operation is going so well it may
take fewer U.8. troops than the
98.000 originally planned to
complete the task.
“We would always, in any

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our rogular olasslflad custom srt at no cost to you. Ju st follow th at#
Instruotlona.
1. Ads will b# sohsdulad to run for 10 days.
S. P rtct of Itsm must bo statod In th s ad and b s 9100 or lass.
3. Only 1 1tsm por ad and 1 ad par boussbold par waak.

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JiS&amp;S!.

�8«nlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 24, 1092 - 10

i tne eartn, peace,
to the season, joy
and to our friends
old and new,
m any thanks.

From The Management
And
Employees Of The

Sanftad H erald

EDITORIAL

ADMINISTRATION

Wayne D. Doyle
Odessa Pugh
Colleen Thomas
Janice L. Warren
PRODUCTION

Peggy Baslla
Robert "Skip" Cowan
Chris Davis
William Egan
John Gordon
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Bruce Perkins
Doug Mackey
Charles McMullan. Sr.
Brenda Rock
Cheryl Smith
Wally Spangler
Raymond Stevens
Jr. Tyrrell
i j jK l
Frank Voltollne

Becky Adams
Dennis Adams
Venice Burnell
Leonard Christian
Judy Cox
Becky Dampler
Tim Dampler
Rovenne Davis
Ernestine Harris
Barbara Miller ‘
Nathan Morgan
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Ron Renaud
John Root
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Nellie Smith
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Bob Stoeckert
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ADVERTISINO

Ron Beck
Kim Beede
Shari Brodle
Marie Cowan
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Christine Gardenour
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Roxzle Lavender
Nikki Reagan
*
CIRCULATION

Sally Arnold
Betty Bennett
Kim Bennett
Tim Dampler
Shirley Lowenkopf
Don McWatters
Melinda Morris
Harriet Murphy
L.C. Painter
Jam es Richardson
Mark Savoie
Nai&gt;cy Savoie
Tracy Schneider
Brian Shaw
Josephine Session
Anna Smith
Nellie Smith

Ityan Anderson
J. Mark Barfield
Shirley K. Baker
Mary Balk
Charles Davis
Doris Dietrich
Tony DeSormler
Vicki DeSormler
Lacy Domen
George Duncan
Del Freeman
Diana Gillanders
Barbara Hughes-Gregg
Marva Hawkins
Richard Hopkins
Bill Kerns
Ed Korgan
Tom Lanham
Miranda Mallborskl
Kelley Mitchell
Midge Mycoff
Nicholas Pfelfauf
Sarabecca Rosier
Herman Schroeder
Jim Shupe
Dean Smith
Julian Stenstrom
Robert Stock
Lurlene Sweeting
Tommy Vincent
Tricia Thomas
Deborah Yingling

�&gt;

.

ftfi - Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida • Thursday, D scam btr

24, 19B2

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We appncl** your continuing mpport
A lo o kjb n m d t09ttiM gyoutHl993

GLAD TIDINGS
All of ua here with you
and youra a wonderful
holiday tenon.

Now Enrolling Infants!
THINK ft PLAT

MERRY .

CHRISTMAS
HaveaDeflghtM
Holiday

May the
holiday
you as you've
been to us!
KIN KIRN'S
TRANSMISSIONS

% V ‘
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-

LEARNING CENTERS INC

.

1000 Uk» Maiy Btvd, Sanford, n
(407) 921*0053

8IN C E 1968.

500 Laurel Ave., Sanford 323-3040

S |f # 4 l« c v r •■ft-—*•

t t f a i n m ^ m n b “x:

Hsv» A Hippy Hsaltfcy
Holiday

DR. WILLIE B. NEWMAN
A STAFF
32IW .SH 434
Loafwood

260-0618

% / j f MCUbgs

HAPPY

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KW ANZAA

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CHRISTMAS

** m

CSii

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CINTRAl PLORI
EDUCATORS FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION
I01B.2XkSt'S*tfor4

YouVaoartaWy
Supouryaar.
8## you in *31

V •!
MEAT FHCKINO; ;

FLOWERS BY COLLINS
3 8 4 4 Orlando D r.. Sanford

O M c M g a n R id liM A A )

323-1204
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*&lt;VH&amp;n9y* T h t
tymu&amp;floyOf
IheSmuon.”

Jm £A JumjJty
DitUaySmmn!9

C h r is tm a s

Bcttya Oramkow
Jim Shuitaman
Eva Shelton
Olinda Noack

B le s s in g s

»

'W ishing You A Safe ft
Happy Holiday)"
BUTCH'S COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR A TOW1NO

2207 W. 1st S t, Sanford
322-7W 7

O ar
jf r ie n it! "

W

To J

l S H E S

3

D?

For A Happy Holiday!
A«dl Harris ft Lori Leeds

OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, IN C
LAKE MARY

SANFORD .

CAMBM RU

328*9888

321-3627

331-7666

CERAMIC FEVER
2499 S. Park Ave., Sanford

321-0828

H APPY
H O LID AY
prom M O ftU l
STINSTEOM, MdNTOSH,
JULIAN, COLftKKT, WIOHAM

BIO* M arylov A Cheryl

COEVILLA AMRTMENTS
2580 Ridgewood Ave. • Sanford
330-1431

750 Wylty Ave., Sanford

321-3601

CHRISTMAS BLESSINGS

May your

A Thank You for Your Patronage

May God BlOSi

w V W W tJ

W W W

R p * w w

snd bs with

you during this
Joyous trim of
Yur.

506 W. 13th S t

1Your Auto. Home
A Commercial
Insurers Wish You
A Merry Christm as

Holidays
HEIIIG-MEYERS
FURNITURE CO.
1100 ft Pnodi Ave., Suftxd

322-7953

n
1
5
ft

�4 9 - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Decem ber 24, 1982

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Opportunities to enhance your
education or gain new knowl­
edge could present themselves
In the year ahead. Take advan­
tage of what Is o
you will And new profitable ways
SM UM SsaB—
’

BEETLE BAILiV

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LET* SEC, V O U *f
AOAINBT He ATI NO
WITH WOOD, OIL OK
NUCLEAR tfcW Eff..

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gressive.

1
TAUSOi (April 20-May 20)
There Is a possibility you could
be a trifle hard to get along with
early In the day. However, once
you get into the swing of things,
y o u r d is p o s itio n b eco m es
charm ing and warm.
OSMtml (May 21-June 20)
Something might develop today
which Initially could make you
fed you are getting the short end
of the stick. Fortunately you will
discover this Is not totally accu-

PEANUTS
MERE5 THE WORLD W ARI
FLYING ACE SITTING IN A
S M A U FRENCH C A F E ..
IT 15 CHRISTMAS EYE,ANP
HE IS D EPRESSED ...

_

19) In Important one-to-one relatlonshlps today you m ight
have to deal with a person who
holds opposing views. Logic and
tact will win this Individual over.
but arrogance won’t.
A0UAJUU9 (Jan. 20-Peb. 19)
You m ight be a s k e d .to do
something Tor another today that
could cause you to Teel some­
what burdened. If you remember
what this person did for you. you
will recant.
R K H (Feb. 20-March 20)
You m ight experience *some
pressure from your friends today
pertaining to an Involvement
that you don’t agree with. In­
stead of overreacting, find your
way out gracefully.
A S m (March 21-April 19)
Today your ability to fulfill your
.plans Is quite good, because both
your productiveness and your

..BUT I SH O U LD N 'T
COMPLAIN..W HAT ABOUT
M Y BRO TH ER S P IK E
W HO'S O U T T H E R E IN
TH E T R E N C H E S ?

I W ONDER
IF SPIKE IS

THINKING
ABO U T
CHRISTMAS.

W

■ ■.■■■■ (June 21-July 221
Being your own person has Its
Ume and place. Today, however,
things will be much more pleas­
ant If you try to be a cooperative
team player.
LBOIJuly 23-Aug. 22) A great
deal can be accomplished today
If you're not overwhelmed by
outalde p ressu res. Do w hat
needs doing In your own quiet
way. preferably unaided by
others.
•
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You

A M EEK

ksJBUI
d lB B I d

-4Bril
JB U I

d lB
d ll
won't be In the mood today to be
told what to do and when to do
II. Conversely, friends and fami­
ly won’t appreciate li If you
appoint yourself social director.
LO RA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) For
the sake pf harmony on the
hom efront today, d o n 't In­
troduce outside elem ents Into
family m atters. Settle Issues
among kith and kin.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Today some of your Ideas and

Activities that challenge your
resourcefulness and innovative
abilities today will be the ones
This could be an extremely you'll find the moat productive
significant year for you where and enjoyable, especially If
your work or career is con­ friends arc Involved.
cerned. It to a cycle wham your
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
talents and tuck may blend in a Recognition for past efforts could
m anner that aaaures success.
be forthcoming at this Ume. Be
CAPRICORN (Deb. 22-Jan. gracious handling this, and knap
19) Today, give priority to m at­ in mind that it la better fete than
ters th a t can enhance your never.
«.
financial security. You could be
OBMUU (May 21-June 2 0 |
luckier than usual In these areas You might be able to grasp the
and It would be a shame to essence of new Ideas or concepts
waste this gift on leas profitable faster than your peers do today.
This could give you a compeU^ aS pa SlIW (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) live edge, especially if you im­
S itu a tio n s th a t b e a r y o u r plement them a few steps ahead
personal tmprtm should work of others.
out to your satisfaction today.
CANCER (June 21-Jidy 22)
Don't delegate to others any­ Changes you've been hoping for.
thing you're better equipped to but have been unable to bring
doyouraelf.
ab o u t on y o u r ow n. couldPMCas (Feb. 20-March 20) transpire today when triggered
You don’t have to be around a by o u tsid e Influences. The
lot of people today In order to be author is not Im portant, the
happy. In fed . some solitude effect Is.
where you're free to sort out
LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) Being
your thoughts might do you a No. 1 won't be that Important to
world of |
you today. This should please
.(March 21-Aprll 19) your companions, because your

ARLO AMO JANII

Sfco

B f PROMs AM

iflSiriDAYS)

' •&gt; . •*
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-■M

n u p v ‘&gt;.

Mark Twain once wrote that
Honesty to the best policy —
when there to money In I t" But
at the rubber-bridge table, often
honesty to a disastrous policy,
coating money,
If you are defending and can
see little
to defeat the
contract, try to bamboosle the
declarer Into thinking the cards
He dlfferenUy. The moat com­
mon way to do thto to to drab an
honor when yqu still hold at
least one lower ciud In the suit.
On to d a y 's -d e a l. N o rth 's
four-diamond response was a
splinter bid. shewing a
raise to four ty e V t with a t moot
one diamond. South cue-bid his
heart aoe; North cue-bid his d u b
aoft and ffn ith . Jumped to the
atom'..
.
Weal led the club »*gh*, de­
clarer winning with dummy's
k in g .J S S ^ i h S t t b e o n l y
' ■

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s u g g e s t i o n s m i g h t be
challenged, but don’t let this.
Irritate you. Think of It as an
opportunity to validate your
views and your will.
(Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Financial conditions could be
a trifle strained today. In m atters
where you have control, things
should be OK. but where others
are Involved, it could be another
story.
efforts (night be
in cm if f i bdccuu.

VIROO (Au|
Ug. 23-Sept. 22)
O thers may find gratification
today In frivolous
loua activities that
provide momentary enjoyment.
However, you are not apt to feel
content unless your Ume Is
spent productively.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
leadership qualities will seek
expression today, but you'll do
so In a m anner th at Ingratiates
youraeffto others rather than
irritating them . Hail to the chief.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Early today It m ight be a trifle
difficult to finalise m atters and
tie ihihga down. However. If
you 're p ersisten t, victory la
likely through tm ^rkinanr—

BAORTARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Make It a point today to get
in touch with people whom you
rarely see but have been on your
mind lately. Benefits could result,
from reopening the lines of
communication.
(C H 992. NEW SPAPER EN­
TERPRISE A88N.

danger was a 3*&gt; trum p split.
South called for dum m y's spade
five. When East followed with
the three. South played his two.
Thto safety-play guaranteed only
one laser In the suit. As you can
see. U was necessary, aa East did
have all three trum ps.
Now go back to trick one.
Suppose- under the club king.
Boat drops the queen. What wUI
declarer make of-that? Even to
the bartender, it will look like a
singleton. And now the trum p
satiety-play loses some of Its
appeal. If declarer ducka a
trum p. West may win with a
singleton honor and give his
partner a club ruff to defeat the
atom. Therefore South wUI prob­
ably continue With a spade to the
ace and lose two trum p tricks to
E ast/..;
;»
“'t defeat the contract

*

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                    <text>Sanford Herald
S e r v in g S a n fo r d , L a k e M ary a n d S e m in o le C o u n ty s i n c e 1 9 0 8
85th Year. No. 81 - Sanford. Florida

NEW S DIGEST
INSIDE

F lo o d ’s a fte rm a th

City, residents continue to battle drainage problem s

□ Le isu re

By J. MARK BARFIELD

TV, weekend guide

t

Herald Slafl Writer

Tin* w eek’s television listing. Including a
sports ca lendar, p lu s a com pilation nf eve n ts
a n d activities In a n d a ro u n d th e Sanford and
Lake Mary areas.

See Leisure Magazine

□ People
Use proper bakeware
Making failures’.’ Proper cookw are Is essential to
tu rn in g out light. Unify cakes a n d breads.

See Page 3B.

Thanks to all
SANFORD — More th a n 4 5 0 people stood in
line to be led at the Sanford R escue Mission on
Kit It Street yesterday. Mother B lanche Weaver,
director of the mission, said.
"We were blessed with lots of food a n d m an y
volunteers." W eaver said
S he said that m ore th a n 1(H) m eals were also
packaged u p a n d delivered to those w ho could
not com e to the m ission in person to cat their
T hanksgiving meal.
On W ednesday, about 200 people dined on
soup, bread and apples at the Mayor's Soup-cr
S upper.
" T h a t 's really not a n Indication ol the a m o u n t
of m oney we were able to raise.” Mayor Hcitvc
S m ith said. "A lot ol people m ad e contributions,
but did not com e l o c a l . ”
S m ith said th e m oney, which will be donated
to the R escue Mission a n d the Sanford Christian
S haring Center, will not I k * co u n te d until early
next week.

SANFORD — Although (ioldshnro re sidents say
city officials have m a d e a soggy effort id
correcting their Hooding problem s, officials sav
th e y 're doing a s m u c h a s quickly a s they can.
And City Manager Hill S im m o n s said even alter
the the cliv s p e n d s S I2 million to 8 1 0 million to
a d d re s s tin* neighborhood d ra in a g e problem s
d u rin g (In* next decade, occasional Hooding m ay
still occur.
"I don't think anybody w a n ts us to tear mil
whole city blocks to correct flooding problem s."
said S im m o n s this m orning.
T u e s d a y 's historic 10-Inch p lus gully-washer
lett at least 25 families In the eltv Hooded out ol
their ho m es lor a day or more. Five families were

I don’t think anybody wants
us to tear out whole city blocks
to correct flooding problems. J
- C it y M a n a g e r B ill S im m o n s

given refuge hv I lie ( 'entrul Flm Ida C h a p te r ol the
Am erican Red Cross. T h e re m a in d e r sought
refuge with family a n d b le n d s At le .is t a ilo/en ol
the Hooded h o m e s were In Goldsboro. said Mike
I loenlug. city lire battalion elite).
Mill as T uesday n ig h t's llootlwaler lias begun in
recede, residents ol tilts lormci town say they
have bail ail u n w e lc o m e re m in d e r nl their
long-standing dra in a g e problem s m tills Imv lylng
area In the vicinity ol West 15th S i t e d Many ol

Pedestrian
killed, local
man charged

28 shopping days until Christmas

ByQ EO R O ED UN CAN

Herald Stall Writer
SA N F O R D — A l o r m c r L a k e M ary c ity
co m m issioner re m a in s mil on bail today alter Ills
arrest W ednesday In Lake C ounty tin cha rg es ol
driving u n d er the lulhienee/iuauslaughler. Oflielals have ch a rg ed Victor Gabriel Olvera, ol
S anlord. with striking a pedestrian a n d killing
him W ednesday on a Lake C ounty road.
According to th e Florida Highway Patrol, the
n a m e ol the deceased can not lie released yet due
to nolificnllon of th e next ol kin.

Freem an in stable condition

See Charges, Page SA

ORLANDO — Marilyn F ree m a n, who was
critically Injured w hen h er llve-ln boylrlend
stabbed her repeatedly with a kitchen knife
d u rin g an argiancnt on Monday. Is now In fair,
but stable condition at Florida Hospllnl-South In
Orlando.
Her boyfriend. Daniel J r n a n c Livingston,
rcm u ln s at th e J o h n E. I’.Jk Correctional
Fuclllty without bond, charged with a ttem p ted
m urder.
"It looks like s h e 's going to m ak e it." said
hospital sp o k esm an Renee Ko|Jtowskl. "T h ere
Isn't a date set for h er release frm i th e hospital,
but she is doing b e tte r."
F reem an w as stubbed several tim es In the
face, the c h e s t the s to m a c h a n d both a r m s
d u rin g an argum ent that began when Liv­
ingston accused h er of d ating o th er men. She
wus in critical, hut u n s ta b le condition when she
w as brought Into the hospital on Monday
afternoon.

B y VIC K I D o B O R M IM

Compiled from staff reports

Herald Staff W riter

I UONPER IF SANTA KEEPS
A SPECIAL LIST FOR
PERFECT PEOPLE ..

the s tree ts and y a rd s becom e p o n d s after even a
c o m m o n s u m m e r dow npour.
Last year, a gro u p ol Goldsboro re sidents asked
c o m m i s s io n e r s to llx tin* p ro b le m . D espite
prom ises, they say. Iltllr lias been done.
" T h e y should have done so m e th in g a long time
ago." said llenny J o s e p h , a resident ol West
Flghtli Street. "T h e y m ade a lot ol p rom ises last
year, hut they haven't b o u r n th in g ."
Moth Mayor M dtye S m ith a n d com m issioner
Mnb T h o m a s sav they believe llte city Is doing all
it can to correct th e im m ediate problem s caused
by i b i s w e e k 's d o w n p o u r . S i m m o n s s a id
w a sh o u ts in West 12lh Street a n d o th e r stree ts
have been tilled a n d oily crew s a re w alling for
w aters to recede in ditches so they can clear
plugged drain pipes.
S e e F lood. P a g e 5A

C lin to n c o u ld
aid A u to Train
H atald Photo by Tommy V in c tn l

Shoppers at 7 a.m. today converge on Kmart
when the doors open. Shoppers also got to

W alMart and J.C. Penneys early lor tho busiost
retail day of the year.

Retailers appear on verge
of a good holiday season
SANFORD — While som e were sllll robbing
th e sleep from their eyes a n d wishing they
had not had quite so m u c h turk ey and
p u m p k in pie y esterday, th ere were uImuiI 30
people w aiting o u tsid e th e Wul Murl in
Sanlord for a c h a n c e to be u m o n g the first
shop p ers of th e C hrlslm u s season this intirnlug.
Grncc Byrd. a s sistan t m a n a g e r of the store,
said she w as " s u r p ris e d " by th e crowd.
"W e didn't expect th c rc 'd be so m a n y out
th ere thut e a rly ." she said. "W e figured
th crc 'd Ik* a few people w hen we o|K*ued. hut

sev en o'clock Is aw ful early for m ost folks."
Ihtoyed by m o n t h s of stead ily rising sales,
th e retail in d u stry ap p e a rs on th e verge of Its
Ik*s I holiday sh o p p in g seaso n sin ce 108H.
Several signs pointed tn a b ette r C h ristm a s
season a s retailers aw aited to d a y 's traditional
start — the d a y after Thanksgiving, when
stores a n d m alls a re m obbed.
Most Im portant Is the fuel that " sa les have
been steadily m oving up since last sp rin g ."
said Daniel Marry, a retail Industry analyst
with Merrill Lynch A Co.
S urveys. Including one released T u esday by
l lit* Conference Hoard, have show n co n s u m e r
confidence Improving. Tin* b u s in e s s research

L See Shop, Page 5A

By NICK PFEIFAUF

Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD — President-elect Clinton m ay have
the o pportunity ol creating Jobs and spurring the
econom y. II he renew s th e American rom ance
wltli p assenger railroad trains. W hether It will
directly In-Ip t lit* Sanford area however, rem ains
to he seen.
Sanlord Is the sou th ern term inal for Auto
Train, and one of the stops lor Ainlrak passenger
service. Auto T rain Is seeking to create larger
facilities, while A inlrak h a s long been In need of
Im proving its p a sse n g er term inal.
With the federal budget dcllcit easting a long
shadow on the laud, som e railroaders w onder Just
how m u c h a Clinton adm in istratio n ca n sp end to
Improve rati p a sse n g er service In the United
S ta les an d to lace the country with high-speed
trains like those now ru n n in g In Europe and
Japan.
C am paigning for the White House. Clinton
repeatedly said that a s president he would cha n g e
the policy direction of the Mush adm inistration
a n d "Invest In a high-speed rail netw ork between
o u r cities."

See Railroad, Page 5A

Historic Sanford Tour of Homes
28 shopping
days to Christmas

INDEX
BE
C lassifieds....— 8-1 OB
C a m la t........... .
Crossword
D i i r Abby..... .........30
B a a tlii...... ..... ..... BA
Editorial............
Florida...............

w
Horoaoop*
Movloo......
Nation.......
Fooplo......
F o lle o ......
Religion....
Sport*...... ........ 1B.B
Tolovislon...... ........ 3
Woothor....

Front brings rain, cooler temps
Cloudy und cool with
a 50 percent ch a n ce
of rain. High In the
u p p e r 0 0 s to low 70s.
Wind northw est 5 to
lO m pii.

For moro woathar, aoo Fopo »A

T h e y ’re c o n v e r ts to h o u s e fro m a n o th e r era
Herald Correspondent

SANFORD — J o n a n d J a m ! Meeks
didn't Intend tn pu rc h ase a histori­
cal home, hut after they looked
a ro u n d , they became* converts.
"W e I(Miked at th re e or four in this
are a on a couple or occasions before
we pu rc h ased this o n e." said J o n .
T heir hom e al H21 S. Park Ave.
will he featured on the Sanford
Historic Trust T o u r of H om es Dee. 5
a n d (i.
T h e Meekes p u rc h a s e d the hom e
from d e s c e n d a n ts of the original
o w n e rs. H arry an d R cbcccu
Stevens, a n d a re only the second
o w n e rs ol the 11)13 hom e. They
chose it. they sold, because it w as In
such good repair. T h e S te v e n s 's
d aughter, also Rebecca, lived in the
hom e for a n u m b e r of y ears and
ta u g h t school at S a n fo rd High
School, a n d the Meekses bought the
hom e from her.
" S h e c a m e to visit a couple of
w eeks ago so we could show lu*r
what we had done with the h om e."
said J a m ). " S h e told us they u sed lu
close the |MM kct doors a n d use the

See Homes, Page 5A

I

H atald Rholo by Richard HopMn*

Jam ! and Jo n M e e ks relax in one of se ve ra l p a rlo rs fe a tu rin g p o cke t do o rs.

SU B SC R IB E TO T H E SA N FO R D H ER ALD FO R T H E B E S T L O C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . C all 322-2611

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WEST PALM BEACH - Nine year-old Daniel Dreabach will
have quite a atory to tell his little lister some day. He helped
deliver her.
He and hla pregnant mother were watching "Lethal Weapon
II" on television Tuesday night when she went Into labor. He
called her doctor, who called 911,
Daniel, a fourth grader, coached hla mother on her breathing.
remembering what to do horn the Lam axe classes he took with
her. ’i told her to breathe.** he said.
Alter live or 10 minutes, he said: "I saw a little head coming
out. tt happened so Cast. 1barely knew what was happening."
When emergency medical workers arrived at their West Palm
Beach home a few minutes later, around 10:30 p.m.. all they
had to do was cu t the umbtl teal cord.
Officials at Good Samaritan Medical Center said Wednesday
the/mother and baby Divlna, bom at S pounds. 1 ounce, were
doing line. The mother declined to be Interviewed.

’ clients!
l

Newspaper ad

a d fij1

____ _________
_______
WEST
PALM BEACH
—
taking out a newspaper
namlns men arrested for
itltutes.
ln f humiliation
humlliAtlon
stltutes. iiy
savins

s s g o s r
i r f .

M *» c ,

O ra h a m

•It's a matter of space and estabUshl
wing
priorities of what's important/; he mldj
go‘
d l w ^ . but we ^ t p u b l l s ^ m .
Before printing the M. r a t runitsnet
ioni uiuiin
i ^ i n W tTJm y^Si^

__
_
_ _ area
_ _ _to
—* marched
through
the Northwood
bring attention To the problem. They have
The mayor Is
1tried to banish prostitutes through code
advertisement enforcement and police pressure.
mltcltlntf nro*
We want It all to go away," said Amy
rruiy do
Tolderiund* ia 10-year
10*ycir resident.
resident* "It's
*It • gone
jonc
may
i f wwhhaiti ToWerlund.

m,y

»*»■».«■«•

u ld

aka

la

frustrated wtUi laws (hat allow the
arretted tn prostitution stings to walk
with notices to appear In court. The ad will

« ■ « *»

« * h . b « k dow n

p |w

least one of the men arrested said

mayw

l ^ tr « . « W
Hhnsfrs*? S " woul

prostitution on
* IV
make a difference. If you put somebotty'e
Palm
Beach
Post
Managing
Editor
Tom
name
In the paper, that's not newt."
"People have the right to know who's
"I'll take II « s fkr as 1 have to, to tm t It."
; m problem In their neighborhood." O'Hara, In explainingrthe newspaper's
not to
print -—
the ,—
names
said .said ---------Ms. Graham, adding she would conshe said Wednesday.
■policy
----- , —
~ ^......
- —of clients,
----- r ---------------Over the last year, the mayor and the newepapeni aren't law enforcement agentlnue to publish names from prostitution
Northwood Neighborhood Association have ctea.:
^
stings.

Florida pilot oraahoa In Louisiana
NEW ORLEANS — A small airplane crashed In eastern New
Orleans Thursday alter the pilot reported he was out of fuel and
attem pting to land on a highway, a - Federal Aviation
Administration official said.
New Orleans M ice Identified the pilot as Donald Jacques,
51. of Jacksonville, Fla. He and a dog — the only other
occupant of the Piper Cherokee — walked away from the
heavily damaged aircraft without injury.
'T h e pilot reported that he was running out of gas about 10
miles east of Lakeftont Airport." said David H. Baldwin, an
FAA watch supervisor.
Baldwin said the pilot's flight plan Indicated he was en route
to New Orleans from Jacksonville.
Jacques told police he was attempting to land on Chef
Menteur Highway white avoiding two vehicles. The plane

Woman,
boy renew
affair
SHALI MAR ( API -

rho i

■Sr

A

OM Seoul* can
for tfwMrtti

. w____k:;hat
aex with a 18 year aid bay has
adm itted in court th at they
renewed their affair.
The hoy, now IS, i

Mom than 1S0 Olds 8couts,
their parinla and friends
retention pono
to
plant trese ami pledge to earn
for the earth, as well as to

he resumed having

unvm piuyiiivni uiu|n m oouvn novum

La
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D M U t i r y In # pO nO * W l f r i P i f l OT

MIAMI - A large drop In Dade County's Joblaaa rate last
month mema from on increase in temporary Jobs hsrauae of
.economists say.
rate In Broward and Palm Beach
In October, with Broward's the lowest tn 18*
■A u u u

Wg d|

8.6

&lt;Am.

Junior Troop 148 among the
eeitleipents were (from left): i
Robin Ovomlek, Stephanie
elly C o le m a n ,
R o w e d ,- K
.................

HoNey, Erika Dunkman and
Meredith Hoyer. The troop
leader fe Keren Allmondlngor.

-

«»m il aasd pcrvCsii m qcxiic^xiidcIis

L"
'Wl.

saaavearago. .1 g r a
r Jobless rate was 8 .9 1
In September and 7.4 percent a

ths impact of hur?taene-fdated Insurance spending,
"•rowacd's flgures reflect the Met that not s lol *
m of storm damage, and there w
to the hurries re .” said Bruce
------------------ frortda’aDtviston of Labor.«
In M m Beach County, the October i
~ 1 11.4 percent I
Irate a year an
was 7.1 percent.

tjmm nt m,r.m s i

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a child at center

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k.x a

that

b

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M B M iM n i i p f

m en d luring a p a t

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ing Improper evidence and withholding Informa­
tion that would have been helpful to the defense.
Fleet dented the allegations.
Acosta's wife, Debra, end young daughter
quickly left the courtroom as he wna ted out In an
orange Jail jumpsuit and teg Inns.
Later, Mrs. Acosta raid she would stand by her
husband of 17 years. "My husband is going to
prison for something he didn't do." she said.
"And the state has lefr us totally penniless. We're
on welfare thanks to the State of Florid*. They
made my life a Bring belL a living nightmare.'

SHALIMAR - An Air Force srrfront ha* been
■Mteoced
to life in arlson for meb^*ina a child at
M re. M o u e r'e h u e b a a d .
Ma wSk'a dap cme center lo^aasby Fort Walton
Lclaiarte MauarA *
■ cE m C1^ ... .... ■*■-I f**.4 V i.
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|n d l8 e fc r4 JoeAcoau. 37.
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---- A tnmstn health sin irsi In 1888 and igaB -f
w me

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iirtyffys.

w nw qn wi
him Sept. t8. The judge
plan for mercy.
\ in the Air fa te s end holding the
eecutfoP efoerance. which comes
MMild never.de anything to lose
/ ' ▲aqsupaid. "I would Uke to ssy that I

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case, auditors found, the
to supervise a physician

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The Department of Hsakh and RahabiMUUvc
care center;
Services shut down Mr*. Aooate’a
children
She accused the agency ofbralm
and of
into bejtevtng they had been
, !her husband isl
brought
The mothers of two alleged
t heir children to the sentencing.
"I brought my daughter t e n becauee she
wanted
— nted to me
see justlcs
jus-------bring
Dtherseid
was served," one mother
la going to
therapy. »
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■- j
'Tlfo doctoraracomineodod that her seriog this
mint to the Judge. Aeeete accused
and knowing that the bod men can't hui7 bar
It AtforneyuiM Pleat ef mtratfuo- anymorewflThelpherrecover/'eheeeld.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, November 27, 1«2 - SA

Lake wary ponce (arrested
,
Jason A. Brinlger.
_____
23. 206 N. Sir
Lawrence. Sanford, on Wednesday. Police report seeing him
car 880
W. Lake Mary Boulevard. The
drive o(T the roadway near
I
car became lodged In the ditch. Officers charged him with
driving with a suspended license. A computer check revealed
he was wanted on a warrant charging him with tailing to
appear In court. No other charges were Immediately Identified.

Vaccine’s success
draws attention
to its failures
ly JV F D O N N

Associated Press Writer_______

GARDNER. Mass. - The
irenis or 13-year-old Ryan
luma blame his epilepsy and
Cab driver unpaid
mental retardation on a vaccine
Sanford police arrested Petrlcc Nicholas. 34, #89 Shenan­
that was meant to keep him
doah Village, Sanford, on Tuesday. He was located at 2100 S.
from
harm.
French Avenue. According to the police report, a cab driver
The
family Is one of thousands
wported bringing Nicholas to that location, but said Nicholas
reported
with
claims
against the U.S.
ten without paying
paylr the 910.70 In cab fare. Nicholas was
government
for
alleged health
charged with theft.
damage from the childhood
vaccine for pertussis, also known
Cocalnaarraat
as whooping cough.
Sanford police arrested Albert Howard Harris, 38. with no
Yet the overall story of the
local address, at 7th Street and Pine Ave.. on Tuesday
vaccine Is one of scientific
following an undercover drug purchase. He was charged with
triumph. It Is credited with
sale and delivery of crack cocaine.
turning whooping cough into o
rather exotic disease.
Sting nataarraat
A h a lf c e n tu r y ago, th e
bacterial ailment, with Its pro­
Altamonte Springs police arrested Michael Robert Largent.
longed cough, could kill 7,000
20, 100 Slade Drive. Longwood. following a sting operation
people a year in this country.
Tuesday at 420 E. Altamonte Drive. Although details of the
Fewer than 10 have died annu­
arrest were not Immediately revealed, Largent was charged
ally since 1961. according to the
with sale and delivery of a controlled substance.
federal Centers for Disease Con­
trol and Prevention In Atlanta.
Domaatie vlolanca arraata:
More than 40 states legally
• David Wayne Neeland. 35. 292 S. C.R. 18. Lake Maty, was
mandate (he vaccine. About 22
arrested by Lake Mary police early Wednesday at his residence,
million doses are given each
following an altercation with a female, He was charged with
year, usually in a five-shot
Imltcry. domestic violence.
series.
•T erry Lynn Manley. 28. 4270 School Street. Sanford, was
Yet the vaccine's very success
arrested at his residence by Sheriff's deputies Tuesday. Police
has made the shots less at­
said he had been In a tight with his brother. Manley was
tractive to some parents and
charged with domestic violence, battery.
doctors.
“ For an Individual child, the
Warrant arraat:
risk Is greater from the vaccine
than the disease," said Dr.
Jonnie Earl Bcverltt. 35, 1600 Sipes Ave.. Sanford, was
Joanne Hatem. medical director
located by Sheriff's deputies at his residence Tuesday. He was
of (he National Vaccine Informa­
wanted on a warrant charging him with violation of parole on a
tion Center in Vienna. Va. The
conviction or sale of cocaine.
center Is run by a parents' group
for vaccine victims.
Incldant raporta:
The vaccine Introduced In the
•W anda Harmon. 579 Andrews Rood, Sanford, reported
1940s contains a dead pertussis
•4.000 in clothing and 011.200 In Jewelry were taken from Her
cell that fosters antibodies to
residence Tuesday.
fight the disease. But II also
• Helen Espltalller. 489 Sun Lake Circle, #307. near Lake
carries
a neurotoxin that can
Mary, reported her vehicle parked In the lot near her home, had
cause problems. They some­
apparently been burglarized. She told Sheriff's deputies the
times lead to local swelling,
driver's seat and steering wheel had both been adjusted from
fever,
or high-pitched crying.
(heir normal positions. Nothing was Immediately reported
Some
doctors suspect the
mlaslngi
vaccine
brings
on neurological
•A Targe
_ refrigerator trailer, owned ^by Enterprise Truck
damage, seizures and even a
Brokers, was reported stolen Tuesday, while parked at 1300 S.
potentially fatal allergic reaction
French Avenue. Police report the theft probably Involved the
In a small number of cases.
use of a large truck to pull the trailer.
Parents, doctors and drug
•A VCR and microwave oven were reportedly taken
makers reported about 7.200
Tuesday from the home of David Sauls. 404 Colonial Way. In
adverse re a c tio n s and 280
Sanford.
deaths after pertussis vaccina•A blue golf 3-wheeled vehicle was reported stolen Tuesday
n
tiona for the 20 months
ending
wh&lt; “
af the real' of th# Afntrak building. 000
July 51* Howeses. i~
.W8«pfot0l&gt;
» ..f-"
stolen T * not' establish a~daflriMe
•T w o bikes.*-vdKied kt $575.* Were ' repOrtefll-y —
official! at the
link, according to officials
Tuesday, from the home of Joanl Williams, 2740 R!
naD rug AdminlstraU.S. Food ant
AVe.. #51. Police said the thief cut chains which had secured
Won.
. the bikes to the porch.
“We have not been able to tie

It In with death or even brain
damage." said Dr. Wall Orens*
leln. director of (he CDC's Divi­
sion oftmmunlza Hon.
Ryan Burns came down with a
fever affer hla first pertussis shot
at 3 months old. according to his
mother, Donna.
By the lime he took his fourth
shot around 18 months, he was
suffering choking fits, severe
diarrhea, and a bleeding rash.
He later developed seizures and
didn't begin talking until he was
4.
"I had a normal boy almost 13
years ago to the day. Every time
wc went to the doctor for his
physical, he got worse and
worse." his mother said.
Mrs. Bums filed her case with
the U.S. Claims Court In Wash­
ington on Sept. 12, 1990. It was
recommended for dismissal, but
Mrs. Bums last Friday asked for
a formal review before the court.
Her request for compensation
asks only enough to guarantee
lhe boy's 839 monthly medical
Insurance payment and hts edu­
cation through high school.
The U.S. government, fearing
that legal costs might drive
enough makers from the busi­
ness lo threaten the vaccine's
supply, set- up formal mecha­
nisms in 1988 to pay for claims
for pertussis and several other
vaccines. Those injured prior to
Oct. I. 1988, are compensated
from an $80 million annual
congressional appropriation.
Later victims are covered by a .
pool funded by a tax on the
vaccine.
About 3.200 pertussis claims .
were filed as of Nov. 16. accord­
ing to the Public Health Service.
C ritics and Its supporters
agree the ultimate solution will
be a safer vaccine. Some say a
vaccine licensed earlier this year
for use In older children repre­
sents Just such an advance, but
government scientists say more
research Is needed lo evaluate its
e f f e c tiv e n e s s In y o u n g e r
children.
Drug companies are quick to
point to the good done by the
vaccine.
"People forget what It waa Uke
before we had these tools of
irtitn a n f ia tlo n .'" s i t d B eth
Writers, ri*spokesman-for'Con- •
" n r i t i g h t ‘L a b d r r i t d r I d s In
Swlftwater. Pa. "Babies died."
However, parents of victims find
l i t t l e c o n s o la tio n In th a t
perspective.

M an reportedly confessed to his
s slaying, hiding bodies
R IM
y SEATTLE — A man accused of hacking his wife
^ an d two children to death, then stashing their
u bodies In a storage locker for 12 years, admitted
"• the hatchcLslaylngs when he was arrested, court
documents allege.
Jf Trial Is scheduled to begin Monday for Mark
James Bender, charged with three counts of
.. first-degree murder.
Recently filed court documents say Bender told
detectives he first killed his 35-year-old wife.
f, Barbara, and then murdered the two boys. Mark.
15. and Brian. 8, at their home In suburban
Federal Way In April I960.
■ Their bodies weren’t discovered until last
v summer, when two men bought the contents of
an abandoned rental storage locker a t an auction.
Mrs. Bender and the boys originally were believed *
to have left town in a domestic dispute.
Jury selection won't begin until after the Judge
rules on s number of pretrial issues.
The 50-year-old used-car salesman was ar­
rested July 25 at his home In Nampa, Idaho.
Pretrial documents quote the as telling police
after his arrest; “l ‘m not saying I didn't do it. 1did

do It. 1 didn't plan U. Did I have an alcohol
problem? Yes, a trigone."
Bender told police that he was eager to get back
to Washington, according to the documents.
"What's done is done. I'd Just As soon get out or
Idaho," the statements say.
Defense attorneys Theresa Olson and Dave
Roberson.have asked Judge Anne Ellington to
suppress Bender's statements. Police should have
stopped questioning Bender before he made those
remarks because he .expressed an Interest In
seeing an attorney, they contend.
The defense also has entered motions to move
the trial out of King County because of pretrial
publicity and to prohibit prosecutors from telling
jurors that Bender was convicted of attempted
robbery In Idaho In 19S2.
When Bender was arrested, he was living with
hia new wife, Anna, and a stepdaughter. Tracy.
Both support him and will attend the trial, said
Olson.
\
,i
The locker's contents were auctioned alter
Anna Bender slopped making rental payments on
the storage apace without her husband's knowl­
edge.

Dad Steven Jones feeds daughter, Quonella, 10 months, at the
Crooms School of Choice Thanksgiving dinner Wednesday In
Sanford.
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EDITORIALS

A group o f Sem inole County d tlse n e Is
show ing a devoted attitude toward a r t The
S em in ole Arte for E ducation (8AFE) la
operating a s a fundraising body betw een th e

“ Politics,*• wrote Robert Louts Stevenson. "Is
perhaps th e only profession for which no
preparation Is thought necessary/•
He was wrong. Pundltry is another. The
Curmudgeon knows this because so many of his
critic* know how to do It. They advise me all the
tim e—especially when I write about politics.
how they advise me. Like the lady from
piqued by some of the
stulf I wrote about Oeorge
1
__
ge Bush
and suggested
I
sleep on my words before 1 print them. Or the
m an from Maryland who characterised my
of Bush as arrogant. Or the many
&gt; who demanded to know my military
record after t listed the hypocrites in Republican
ranks who were hammering Clinton for dodging
the draft but managed to avoid It themselves.
Or Mr. RW. also from Pennsylvania, who wrote
them words:
"G uys like* Dan Rather. Martin Schram.
Joseph Spear. Mike Royko. Robert Wagman. Ben
Wattenberg, Mike Kinsley. Anthony Lewis, Chris
Matthews. Hodding Carter til. Jack Anderson.
Ju an WUUams, William Half, and others, as real
men. couldn't carry Oeorge Bush's jogging
sharia or Don Quayle's golf clubs!"
The Curmudgeon has concluded from this and

other evidence that some of you think he Is a
partisan critic, and so he has decided lo entertain
a few Inquiries about his politics:
Dear Curmudgeon:
W h en h a s a R e ­
publican ever been
c o m p lim e n te d in
your column? When
has a Democrat been
bashed? — DB from
Blythevllle. Ark.
Dear DB: Let me
say, for the record,
that I don't give a
tinker's damn about
any political party’s
a g e n d a . I am a
m iddle-of-the-road
populist and a regis­
tered in d ep en d en t
w ho h a s v o te d
f i Oh, how they
through the years for
advise me
b o th R e p u b lic a n s
and Democrats, and
once I think for a
Libertarian. My only
Interest lathe public

Interest, and that Is why 1came down so hard on
Oeorge Bush.
1 do not believe that nasty political campaigns
are In the public Interest. It offends me when a
candidate attempts to divert our attention from
Issues that really matter with vile attacks on the
honor and character of a challenger. It especially
offends me when the president of the United
States, who ought to be above It. does it and then
assumes that we will Just stufT It down the
memory hole afterward.
My heated commentary had much more to do
with outrage at Oeorge Bush's antics than with
an affinity for BIUClinton.
Dear Curmudgeon: What was your military
record? —RW of Pennsylvania (again).
Dear RW: Six yearq 11963-1969) of honorable
service In the United Stales Army — two active,
four reserve. And that's the last time I Intend to
answer this question.
Dear Curmudgeon: Do you intend to criticise
Clinton like you did Bush? —Heather In Hartford
Dear HNH: He's already In hot water on about
a half do ten Issues, but he deserves the same
honeymoon as his predecessor. Keep reading the
Curmudgeon and give him a critique about
June.

JACK ANDERSON

F*R»TTY S oon it was

a $6«-a-PaY Bestow?
CPFRes/foWT IT C«ST M*
a W R Y T H W ® — M y M f f ie ,

MY K IP S , MY CSPPvcdHo
M a K S R ...

* • r&lt;iti»lil &lt;'

Kuwaitis are at a
loss without Bush
KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - If this smsll
country had been an American county. It
would have been a diehard Bush district
during the presidential election. Kuwaitis
believe Bush walks on water.
In fact, though their recent October election
for the 50-member National Assembly was
h isto ric an d p re c e d e n t-se ttin g , m any
Kuwaitis followed the American election
more cioaety tlun their own,
Following the Des­
ert Storm victory In
March 1091, and the
liberation of Kuwait,
th e U.8. Embassy
was to flooded with
requests for pictures
of President Bush
that they eventually
d i s t r i b u t e d
thousands'.of ‘‘

thanked,
- 1 k*,*
__

During the trial o f Oeorge W ayne C tatt lip
former a—oclatc coaler o f Lake BrattSqr
United Brethren Church, Judge Alan;
made a remark n«st ■houhf be
by all d tlsen s
At a previous church, another girl h a d ,
made an accusation o f
Clatt. She wmfa it to
conducted tbelr own
not report it to a uikorttiaa. .» V~ ’$
What those church ofTViah jjtf* J M f i
th e church
a»Kn k n a r about, th e
accusation took the stand la tie C S tt trial.
Judge D ickey noted the statute o f lim itations
had gone Into effect or the w itn ess rrt#r* need
« la w y er lo « d v l.. h im N ^ ln a t *IV -

many Kuwaiti homes
- a portrait In red.
white and blua oc*

—
~y

•y-y i ': i3l

it-elect BIU
ilntetration
!y qualified
id by the
r Washingi transition
iea nose a
guidelines

government for some period, leaves and then
takes up business with the same agency.
C urrent ru les prohibit a former federal
employee bom lobbying; hie or her former
agency for six months. One potential Clinton
rule being debated would extend the period to
as many as five years.
That rule would Hkely make It difficult, If not
Impossible, to recruit
or technical people
for oilier stfcnclcs.
“I am concerned.*’
one C lin to n
personnel recruiter
said, "especially in
(he situations where
we have to Ond peo-

W hen the aecueattoo wae m a d ., th ose

e x p e rie n c e a n d

matter* It la a
ted .
Rk In Votuala County

w ere

past presidential________
structure Ibr the transition
able UmfeSudvlng the
—— _____, ______ ______
Hi team p u T u g M Iw r by H am id
me I s t h a d i p n o i
WMte tb e a m mo
mM
»«.lt b e- preeluded lrom
--------[my
um ftu g in
Any contact witn ad
ran Hm iu]m ewiouoced by
agency he works for
Christopher are a result of abuato that were
to the Clinton adsaid to have occurred 4*&gt;rlffd and after that minist ration, ere edM
■
~
~ occu^w,
render him unemptoyabie after he leaves
iffVfyuffWit v
_____
"Take an agency like the Federal Comm unketlons Commission. For most of the
'i j- — *
oopecially within Us
y o u h s v s t o have people with
■o r ------------— '-----------

Oha former high-level appointee who left the
O e n e ra l S e rv ic e s A d m in is tra tio n h a s

nor 'iKbiasdoos

PEOPLES' — THAT WE CAME.
HERE PROM ASIA OVER A
LAMP M IM E U f NORTH.

that la the

already a t th e top o f lists o f potential
appointees.
r-|iip«n Is determined to done the govern*

V*

clients on how to deal with the OBA. He ie the

" th le wae exactly ths ktod of person w e a n
looking tor - experienced, very knowledgeable
and already primed to bring about change/
said the CUatoa personnel source. "But he hai
opted out, and I’m afraid this la going to be
repeated often If the regulations are too strict

during tie

nany were determined to
of the National Assembly
a harbinger of their nascent democracy, and a
repose to the rad of tbe world.
It eras also a chance to deliver a kind of
October surprise to the embodied president som ething he could point to with accompUahment in the first weekof October.
Of the 50 men elected to the Kuwaiti
National Assembly. 37 could be described as
candidates. And these men are
to enfranchise Kuwaiti women
next two yean. It's an effort to
emulate things American, right down to a
proliferation ct American-based fast-food
outlets and their Kuwaiti imitations.
But despite dieir beet efforts to support
Bush, right down to the showcasing free and
fair Kuwaiti elections, the president lost. And
when their archenemy flaitdam Hussein shot
off his gun in Baghdad to cehbratc, there wae
numbness and fear. Could they count on
Clinton, who is :the unknown. They're
heartened by his remarks s*FMit Gulf securi­
ty. but la he willing to go to w a?
Our ieenrlste Dale Vs

and school children are onmiragsd to draw
plotuiaa aytdtft^**w their reTtcrm for the
unaccounted ~ addeh am edbtly featured In
ths Kuwait international Hold, right across
from tbs U A Embassy. One private group
dMrtbutsa a commercially polished and
plight of Hip Kuwaiti
ra ffs
Tbs Iraqis amdebed,thousands of Kuwaitis
and'look thorn to Iraqi prlt^T** during the
u vw fftwflfbt of their o co ‘p*tlwi of Kuwait.
The prisoners were routinely abused, and
bomb arfaitrBrfllv cxicutBd. U.S.
Intelligence
w
services estimate there am atlU several
w

p

v

m

p

v

w

j

-

P * P P P " ^ | P P d P P

military threats if necessary, on freelnd their
remaining POKh. They argue now that Bush
has nothing to bee fry strong-arming Saddam

�Charges
A ccording to th e Florida
Highway Patrol, the name of the
deceased can not be released yet
due to notification of the next of
kin.
According to FHP reports, the
accident occurred at approxi­
mately 8:25 p.m. on State Road
64, near Mount Plymouth.
The pedestrian waa walking
east on the right shoulder of
State Road 40 when Olverp's
1979 pickup, also headed east,
ran onto the right shoulder,
hitting the pedestrian and killing
him. the FHP sakl.

f i a t l n a i i fries Fagf &amp;A
"I strongly support the develo p m e n t of h ig h -sp eed ra il
because we need to ensure that
we possess a transportation
system that boosts American
productivity and International
competitiveness." Clinton said.
Clinton alao may act to give
AmIrak, the nation's passenger
railroad system, a measure of
the financial stability It long has
sought.
Howard RoberteoaMbcad of
public, rotations .foritAratr**'
commented -Wednesday. ,TIt’s
questionable a t th li^ tlm e if
Sanford's facilities could be
heloed."
He added. "W e hope Mr.
C linton w ill give ua som e
back-up and provide money for
lin provement of Amtrak. but
until we see what the budget will
allow, and what he -might do
with the money, we cannot

Olvera left the scene and was
stopped by a Lake County depu­
ty, according to FHP reports. In
a d d l t l o n t o t h e
DUl/manslaughter charge, he la
also charged with leaving the
scene of an accident with a
fatality.
He was taken to the Lake
County jail, but waa out on ball
Thursday, according to reports
at the jail.
Olvera was elected to the Lake
Mary City Council in 1979 and
won re-election two years later,
He resigned on October. 1982 to
run for mayor but waa defeated. .

speed rail corridors to the United
States,
tn fa n sa tie n f r e t The Asoaeiatod P rase Is san ta la sd m
th is rep o rt,

.•

the amount of rain that can be
expected to tel once every 25
years, but during a six-hour
apan.
"Once we're all completed
with everything we want to do In
10 years or so, are'll be able to
handle a six-inch (storm) event
pretty well, but t we j e t eight or
10 Inches, we’w stlQ going to
"It will be better, but there'll sdll
be some flooding."
In the mean time, Simmons
said the city h clearing along
Min Creek to allow for Caster
drainage flow to Lake Monroe.
Sim m ons said the clearing,
which has shown signs of easing
the problem, has been hampered
by. the lack d access to the
panel.
.n W n *

,n

m .V .

a

A lt .

*%a_
__
d flO D 1 1 1
O e a tta n e i from Pegs 1A
organiseHon alao found U.8. households
will Increase their spending an
Christmas gifts to snu v erag r of
8409from » 7 7 la sip a a r. - . . .
Ltodv Lovett of'L abe Mary
struggled with nearly a dooen
largebsgs as she stepped toward
the n«rkt«ig lot a t J.C. Penney'*
In Sanford. She said she had
already spent about 8378 on
gifts for her family and she atiU
Bad several more names on her
list.
”1 guess I'll spend another
9100 or 8200 mare before It's all

C a n tta n s d riu m P a ja 1A
kitchen stove
In the mornings, and then close
oft that side at noon and use the
fireplace to heat the other aide."
The spacious home with Its
ket doors between foyer,
Ml parlor and "back" parlor
which the Meekses have made
into a sun room, easily accommod*ted such heating arrangements in an era before central
heat waa a fixture.
Jon and Jam l say their former
home was contemporary and
they literally moved Into their
historic home with no furniture
that suited the home. They have
combed antique stores, auctions
and estate sales and. with the
hetp of a decorator friend, have
almost completely furnished the
home to their taste In the taro
years since their purchase. Jon
has bricked in a courtyard between the home and p twowtory
garage arlth servants quartets
upstairs and they have laid PULP

roll removed!, which reveals his
business name: "Lawton — New
York" on th e Inside cover of the
keyboard.
A second guest room, the
childhood bedroom of Rebecca,
h o u rs an antique baby carriage
marked with the Initials of her
brother’s child.
Upstairs, the home features
five real and one mock transom
wtndows over each of the rooms,
and a massive master bedroom
which leads onto a sleeping
porch, another late addition. The
shutter-type windows which run
along the sleeping porch have
screens that part and open
inward and windows that roll
out. overlook the garden area
and Invite a crossbroeic. The
Meeks have designated the room
an exercise area, and Intend, to
make good use of the home's
third set of bathroom facilities
which back up to the main
upstairs bathroom.
" T h a t's also nice becuase

onto the completed courtyard
and foliage.
Perhaps moat striking la the
wide, three-atep plateau leading
to the stairway in the foyer,
which gives way to the upstairs
bedrooms. A smaller, but Wentical plateau was added from the
gjtchen area shortly after the

with a like spi
walk-in pantry

K

ever been painted." said Jon.
They have reflnlshed some of
that wood, particularly in the
flooring, but only to bring it back
to Its original luster. Area rugs
ad o rn som e a re a s bu t the
Meekses lean toward natural'
flo o rin g In w ide e x p a n se s
th roughout th e home. Like
many older homes, the house!
features a stained glass window;
at the foot of the stairway, and a
h a tra c k w ith low draw ers.'
another of her grandfather's!
pieces, graces the foyer area,
The Meekses have done all the'
work themselves, and aay they'
Hesitated a long time at first tol
get a feel for the house. "It!
definitely has Its own personality." Jamlaald.
They agree that converting a
historic home quickly becomes a
passion. "It's not quite an obsession ." said Jon. "You just
have to take It one room at a
time." The Meekses both work,
and aay care of th e home,

C hrtatm aa seaso n s, they ye
Mamed a conservative approach
is the safest.
L o e b p r e d i c t e d a n In dustrywide Increase of between
6 percent and 641 percent Mer­
rill Lynch's Barry noted that
Christmas 1991 waa so bad. any
Improvement la going to look
good.

•sa

T f iS B S t L iV

the United State* as enthusiasm,
about super tra in s expands
ovefaeas. Many governors support high-speed rati links between major cities. And there is
a targe cheering section on
Capitol Hill.
T n very optimistic shout*
h«gh anniul rail being a suecesafluprogram In the CUnlon
admintatraUoa." said Joseph
Vrantah. author of the book
tan____ —
~__a .
"Super Trains" and
a leading
advocate of introducing high-

"I have checked with the city
m anager, the publlp work*
director and even the fire de­
partment and they aaaure all
that can be done la being done,”
■aid Smith, ’fortunately, we
have a storm enter plan' that will
help in the fatiue."
"It's ancient history, but It’a
Tact that that tMs part of the city
has been neglected for years/'
said Thomas. "Hopefully, things
will turn around. The city a
attitude. I think is positive."
Simmons said the drainage
Improvement plat for Ooldsboro
will help, but not fully correct,
the flooding problems. Because
the community Is old and waa
built on sm al lota close to
ditches, there ft.little room to
Install the kind of culverts and
other drainage improvements
n e e d e d to m eet m in im u m
standards of the St. Johns River
Water Management District, said
Simmons.
4 The wat/er dkfrict normally
requires d ra in s# systems to be
d e sig n e d to deal w ith th e
amount of w ata that can be
expected once every 25 years
throughout a 24-hour period.
Because of the construction re­
strictions, Simmons said the

country,
"■ think w ell do well this
season if thie morning la an
Indication," Byrd aaid.
At the Sanford Kmart store,
manager Frances Schembrt said
that there .w ere, quite a few,
.peojAe WolUhg'to fcet t t the door*
when the store opened this
moroing.
. "And they a rt making a lot of
arge p u rch ases." aha said.

to be a "tale*" Christmas, with
most sates coming In the (Inal 10
days of the season. Over the post
decade, with more women In the
workforce, consumers have generally put oft their shopping
until the last minute.
If |K_
- -la .
it tne season gets a stow start
or sales hit a particularly slow
period - which they often do In
the ftm week or so of December
— nervous retailers may begin
m arklni down
" rprices*
. v. But
w (or
. the
..
most D^ ift the
“iifte*
lim
a that
StoPpST m w 7 b e p a r t S
discounts planned Iona before
the start of m e s e a s o n /*
Like la st C h ristm a s, th e
s e a s o n la l i k e l y t o b e
fragmented; with some parts of
the country and some retailers
doing better than others.
Diane Swonk. an economist
with First National Bank of

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one
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move to the third floor attic area.
and have ftimiahed the room
with old trunks they purchased
from Rebecca SteVrns, and a
fra m e d c e r t i f i c a t e w h ic h
belonged to her .brother. Dr.
lh e,r.
Jam i's grandfather, who waa In
the furniture huslnraa in New
York and C onnecticut. Her
grandfather carved his
in
the piece, unlike the commercial
player piano downstairs, (player

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______

Central Florida Pediatrics
FJULP.

B aldw ln-Fairehlld fu n e ra l

World W arn.
Survivors Induds sister. Aline
M. Smith. Wintw Springs.
Baldw ln-Fairehlld F uneral

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�• A - Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Friday, November 27, 1992

Study suggests genes influence risk of divorce
A P 8 cie n ce W riter

I

NEW YORK —Genes may play
a substantial role In the risk of
divorce, apparently In large part
by Influencing personality, a
new study suggests.
A survey of 1.516 sets of twins
found that Identical twins, who
arc more alike genetically than
arc fraternal twins, were also
more alike In their rate of
divorce.
The genetic effect would nol
come from any single "divorce
gene." nor would It doom people
to divorce, said study co-author
David Lykken.
Environmental factor* Uke cul­
tural Influences would still play
a big role In divorce risk, the
researchers said.
.
Lykken and Matt McQuc.
psychology professors at the
University of Minnesota, present
their study In the November
I s s u e of t h e J o u r n a l
Psychological Science. McGue
said another research team has
found similar results In another
study of American twins.
In Interviews, some scientists
agreed with the conclusion of
Lykken and McGue’s study, but
others said the Identical twins'
similarity may have resulted
from their growing up together.
Lykken said other studies have
shown th a t Identical tw ins

reared apart arc Just ns sim ilar
on m a n y m e a s u r e s a s a rc those
w ho grew u p together.
T h e stu d y Involved 722 pairs
of Identical (w ins a n d 704 pairs
of sam c-scx fraternal twins, ages
34 lo 53. T h e y a n s w e re d a
q u e s t i o n n a i r e In 1080 a b o u t
m a rrln g c am t divorce. About
one-fifth of (he partic ip a n ts had
been divorced.
If genes Influence divorce risk,
re searc h ers said. Identical tw ins
sh o u ld show m o re sim ilarity In
divorce history b ec a u s e they arc
Identical genetically. F raternal
tw ins s h a re only half th e ir genes
o n average.

ing divorces.
R esearchers asked: If one twin
R ichard Rose, a behavioral
In a pair h ad been divorced,
what wns th e likelihood that the geneticist at Indlnnn University
In Bloomington, said a large
second I win h ad been divorced
Finnish stu d y In 1975 found no
loo? T h e a n s w e r w as 45 percent
difference
In divorce betw een
Tor Identical Iwlns a n d 3 0 per­
Identical a n d fraternal twins.
cent for fraternal Iwlns.
T hai m ay m e a n the Minnesota
T h e s t u d y " m a k e s perfect
s e n s e ." alth o u g h th e s tren g th or stu d y docs not apply u n iv e r­
th e genetic Influence vs. th at or s a l l y . a l t h o u g h t h e F i n n i s h
e n v iro n m e n t Is u n c le a r, said divorce nite was low In 1975 a n d
psychologist Mavis Hclhcringlon a n o th e r twin stu d y th ere now
m ight yield results like those
of th e University of Virginia.
from Minnesota, h e said.
S h e also said th at, nil hough
.
Rose said o th e r research h a s
th e s tu d y c o n trib u te s In u n ­
d e rs ta n d in g divorce, she could c o n s i s t e n t l y fo u n d I d e n ti c a l
not think of a practical way to I w l n s lo he m o r e a l i k e In
use th e Information In p revent­ iH'huvIor. life choices a n d life

o u tc o m e s th a n fraternal twins.
T h e new evidence of a genetic
Influence In divorce Is " n e ith e r
su rp risin g n o r d is tu rb in g ." he
said.
But Nell Knltcr. a University of
M ich ig an p s y c h o lo g is t, said
genes nrc not th e only e x p la n a ­
tion for the findings, because
Identical twins, unlike fraternal
twins, often grow u p expecting
In Ik- slmilnr a n d face e n o rm o u s
p s y c h o l o g i c a l p r e s s u r e from
a d u lts In be similar.
S u c h sim ilar tre a tm e n t m ight
m a k e Identical iw ln s m ore likely
lo m arry at sim ilar uges. by
ulTcctlng their d a tin g behavior

und ed uc ational a tta in m e n t, said
U n iv e rs ity o f W isc o n sin
sociologist Larry B u m p ass. If so.
they would be m ore alike on a
k n o w n risk factor for divorce,
b e c a u s e p eo p le w ho m a rry
y o u n g a rc m o re likely lo get
divorced, he said.
In addition. It w ould m e a n
both identical tw in s h ad been
m arrie d for s im ila r len g th s or
lim e w hen th e y unsw ered the
s t u d y q u e s t i o n n a i r e , g iv in g
th e m n m ore eq u a l likelihood of
divorce, he said.
Still. B u m p a s s said he found
I he Idea of a g en e tic Influence to
be plausible.

H* F oftw raltiano-M W M lparod .

&lt;110It s APR (I SOmmmum

(rate lo your Account and Socurr y

Glut of
Christmas
trees hurts
growers

J T
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r« i *i J - 1

i .n s i^
t i » j {*11
1 1*H

PORTLAND. Maine - A glut of
Christmas trees, more competi­
tion and the popularity of
artificial trees have Industry
Insiders worried that this may be
a tough holiday season for grow­
ers and sellers.
“There aren't enough people
for all the trees." said Albert
Oondeck. executive director of
the Maine Christmas Tree Grow­
ers Association, which repre­
sents 350 growas.
Christmas tiee growers are
ex p ected to h a rv e st ab o u t
850.000 trees across northern
New England this season —
500.000 in Vermont. 100,000 In
New Hampshire and 350,000 In
Maine.
The root of this season's tree
lut dates back to the early
080s. when many growers
began planting more and more
trees.
Now there's a surplus na­
tionwide. particularly In the
Northwest and Midwest, said
Marshall Patino, a Christmas
tree specialist with the Universi­
ty of New Hamjahlre cooperative
extension service.
The popularity of artificial
Christmas trees adds to the
growers' woes. Nationwide, 46
percent of homes that display a
tree use an artificial one, Palm os

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Because of the glut, some live
trees are starting to appear In
the Boston and northern New
England markets at ultra-cheap
prices —$6 apiece, Patmos said.
In northern New England.
Christmas trees typically cost
818 to 830.
The sour ectnomy h1*
prompted more people to sell
trees on the side — but without
enough knowledge to do It prof­
itably. others wq.
Chuck Masalla owner of the
Sunrise Christmas Tree Farm In
Llncolnvllle. mid he w arns
first-time retailers to be cautious
when buying the* stocks.
“There are riways the op­
timists," Masallnsaid. “If you've
been In bualnem for a while,
then you have to be doing
something right But the person
who says, 'I'm going to make a
killing this yew.' T Just don’t
think that's true"
To beat the doldrums, some
growers are turning to new
m arkets or marketing tech­
niques.
Growers In Tennessee are
thinking about expanding their
market farther south — south of
t h e b o r d e ’r , s a i d J e r r y
Blankenship, apiculture mar­
keting specialist with the Ten­
nessee Department of Agricul­
ture.
■
“We have tafced about ship­
ping some trees to Mexico," he
said. “It's Just In the planning
stages."
Diane Holmes In Kennebunk.
Maine,lllr* m aty choose-end-cut
operators, is keeping her busi­
n e s s c lo s e to h o m e , b u t
transforming It to m a mundane
tree farm Into a holiday experi­
ence.
She Invites ctatomers Inside
the house to srarm up In front of
a wood stove, m d offers them
hot elder, carols, wreath-making
and other season! crafts.

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Panasonic

MAGNAVOX

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will built any local s to ic's pnet; on any identical item

EPSON

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sell, anyday

i(M r*,a canpuaM t t m . i ku UM (‘CioMaii.*
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even (lurnuj their sale day

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Sports
IN BRIEF

• f
•7&gt;. t . i‘ f&gt;-

LOCALLY
W illiam s adm its suicide try
OKI.ANDO - O rlando Magic. forward Itriaii
Williams, who Is suffering Irom clinical d e ­
pression. s,ild h r a l l r m p l r d suicide Iasi uionlh
by taking an o v rrrlosr ol sleeping pills.
Williams, rem oved Irom I h r Maple's active
r o s l r r Indefinitely M onday h r r a n s r ol Ills
roudlllon. h la m r d the siilridr a l i n n p l on Ills
depression H r salil h r didn't know how m any
pills h r took hnl that h r didn't n re d hospital
trra tin r n t.
.
" T h e pills w r r r n 'l stro n g en o u g h ." to ca use
dralli. Williams lold T h r O rlando S rn tln rl in .1
tr l r p h o n r In trrv lrw Irom Ills h o n ir "Hill I was
p rrlly drugged up lor t h r next dav or so "

AROUND THE STATE
Rice charged with assault
MIAMI — I’oltcr w r r r investigating .1 c o m ­
plaint T h u rs d a y Dial Miami llra t s ta r Glen Klee
lot a m ail In Ihe l a r r with a h r r r holtlr In a
predaw n Incident lit .1 topless har.
Anjil'l Estevez. 28. who required It) s t u d i e s
below Ills right ry e . lold poller he w as silting
across Irom Uiee ai the l.lpsilk bar .11 a bon I I 30
a m w hen 1In- player began "looking at him
with a bad lace. "
lie doesn't know why he was h it.” said
Metro Dade poller sp o k esm an d r o m e K eyes "h
apparently ru n ic lor no reason "
T h ro u g h his attorney. Klee denied b riny
involved lit a n y altereallon.

Huizenga added to law suit
ST I’ETEKSHUKG — Florida Marlins owner
W avne H u i/c n y a Is ac cused ol w orking " b ehind
I he s ce n es" to help keep the G iants III San
Francisco and out ol Florida, a lawsuit claims.
An •intended suit tiled W ednesday added
llu /ie n y a a s a deleu d a n t to a suit ayalusi San
Francisco ollleials It eh a ry es llul/eiiya. who
repeatedly salil he supp o rted the G iants' move
to the T a m p a Hay area, 'actively w orked behind
th e s c e n e s to lu ster s u p p o rt lor th e S an
F rancisco G r o u p
n o iw lth s ia n d lu y public
stanees. prom ises a n d s ta te m e n ts directly to the
c o n tra ry ."
There w as no a n sw e r at the Marlins' o lllr r s nr
at a team s p o k e s m a n 's hom e T h u rsd a y .
H u l/rn y a Is th e llrsi baseball ow ne r directly
sued lor m o n etary tlam ayes bv the city ol St
P etersburg a n d th e G iants ol Tampa liav. the
tnvcstntcnl y m u p that souyht to buy and move
the Giants.

AROUND THE REGION
Rapp R eturning’ to M iam i
HATTIESBURG. Miss. - T h e last time Pal
Kapp visited Miami, he was 10 years old and
vaealionlny w ith Ills family. Ills next visit in
Dade C ounty Is likely to he a m u c h lonyer one.
K app. a f o r m e r U n iv e r s ity of S o u th e r n
Mississippi pitcher, w as taken front the San
Francisco G ia n ts o ry a n l/a tlo n by the Florida
Marlins a s the 10th player ta k e n In the Major
l.cnyuc Hasehall e x p a n sio n d ra ft.
"It was really llaltcrlny to m e ." Kapp told the
llaltie sh u ry (Miss.) Am erican in an Interview
front the D om inican Kepublle where lie is
playing w inter hall. " I'm really hap p y about the
whole situation, but It really s u rp rise d m e."

AROUND THR NATION
Aztecs prepare for M iam i
SAN DIEGO — U nderaeldevlny S an Dlcyo
Stale, picked to win the W estern Allilctic
Confcronce hut left without a howl yainc w hen II
killed lo do so. yets the next best thiny w hen it
closes Its season S a tu rd a y ayaiust No. 1 Miami.
T h e Aztecs a r c enm iny oil a 4 5 - 4 1 loss to
F resno S ta te th at denied litem the WAC title.
Additionally. Marshall Faulk, th e leadiny ru s h e r
In m ajor colleye football, sp ra in e d Ills rlyht knee
a n d was held to 2 1 y a rd s a n d on e touchdow n.
Faulk didn't practice until T h u rs d a y and
coach AI Luyiuhtll said lie w on't decide until
pre-yam e w a r m u p s w h e th e r the s o phom ore star
will play. Faulk said lie should he able to play.

Toon to call it a career
NEW YOKE — AI Toon, second In New York
■lets history in p a s s receptions a n d third in
yardayc. Is retiriny from professional football.
A J e t s s p o k e s m a n told T h e Associated Press
thiit the 29-year-old Toon, w ho s u stain ed the
tilth concussion of Ills NFL c a re e r two w eeks ayo
ayaiust Denver, will officially a n n o u n c e his
retirem ent today ill a new s conference, lie had
:i I r e c e p t i o n s l o r 3 1 1 y a r d s a n d t w o
to uchdow ns this season a n d f&gt;17 receptions for
9.905 y a rd s a n d 31 to u c h d o w n s durftiy Ills
clylil -year career.

B A SK E T B A L L

7:30 p.m . — WKCF IH. O rlando Mayle at
Indiana Pacers. ILI
C o m p U f listings on P&gt;9» 3B______________

B
Gliders seek members to make run at nationals
From Staff Reports

OKI.ANDO — Now it's tim e lor nationals
While t h e Florida lllyli School Activities
Association-sanctioned lilyh school cross cniinii v
season ended List week with th e FIISAA stale
ch a m p io n sh ip m eets, there are si til other races in
he run.
Tills S a tu rd ay , lor exam ple, th e University ol
Central Florida will he the site nl the Flmtda
Kcyinnal C ross C ountry C h a m p io n s h ip s (hy.i
n l/e d by the Florida Athletics C onyrcss .Iiintoi
Olympic Proyram . this meet will qualllv harrleis
lor the TAC/IJSA .liinlor O lym pics National ( 'm ss
C ountry C ham p io n sh ip s
Locally. Lake Mary lllyli School ro a ch Mike
Gibson. Lake Hrnnlley coach C harley Harris and
Coach Wise ol the Central Florida Gliders anatle m p llu y lo pul loyether a y m u p ol r u u n e is to
com pete under Ih e G lld e is' haulier.
Kunniny as a n Individual. a n culra n l would

have to linisli in the lop lit) to quallly lor the
11all 011.il meei w h e reas each leant dial tpialllles
loi the 11. 1llou.il eliiimpioushlp m eet may hiiuy
elyhi r u n n e ls , reyardless ol iliclr Individual
Imish al Ihe reylonal level.
The C entral Florida Gliders will allem pt lo
quality two te a m s o| elylil In each ol lour
divisions: Yotuiy Men. Youny W om en. Inlcrmctli.tie Hoys a n d In i n m ediate Girls Kim uers horn
111 1974 a n d 1975 will run in Ihe Youny Men and
W omen divisions while those born In IH79 and
Hi77 will e o m pele in Ihe luterm ed iale classes.
E a c h ol t h e s e l o u r d i v i s i o n s will r u n
5.000 m eter la c e s |ap |im \lllia le lv 3.1 mllesl tin
S aturday There will also be .1 I.(HM) nielei event
1111 iln Youili C lass (1978 1979| al IO a m and
: 1,000 mi It 1 i i i i i s lot lilt Mltlyel 11 OHO I9M11 and
Haiiiam II9H2 am i laicrl classes beyiuuiny at I I

.1 111

Metlals w ill lie aw arded 10 the top 15 llntsliers
in each aye y m u p at 1lie reylonal meet

Keylslration lot S aliird a v 's races is $5 plus a
SIO late lee lor a n y o n e w ho reylslers al Ihe site,
lo run in S a t u r d a y ’s races, an e n tra in mtisi bo
icyisiered with The Athletic C onyrcss (TAC.'I.
which is aiiolliei SH. C om peiiiors should briny
copies ol ilieli bit I h eerlllleale 011 S a tu rd a y
murntiiy.
There are iiddilloual e x p e n ses shoultl a ru n n e r
qualllv lor the untluiinl meet Members ol the
Ceniral Florida Gliders will lie asked to m ak e a
$ 9 0 p.ivmeot lo cover travel costs anti lliere is a
SO rt-ylslrallou let- lot the nailonal rat-e Itot It fees
w ill lie tine ibis S a tu rd a y
I In- national m eet will lie eontlueled ai the
S p rin y Hill Colleye (bill C ou rse III Mobile.
Alabam a, on Sal lit tla\ . I lie 12
For adillltonal
it-yional race o r
G liders. eonl.it 1
(321 Ol 421 01 Wise

Inlorm allou eoneerniliy the
|olum y the Central Florida
G ib so n (333-23701. H arris
(9H2-130HI

Going out with style
Lyman tops
year with
Rotary win
By BILL KERNS

Herald Correspondent
LONG WOOD — Alter a season ol
siirprlsiny success, ibis was the
c r o w n in g a llirm a llo n ol L ym an
Iliyli School s piyskiu re-emeryeiit-e.
On T h u r s d a v u m r u ln y . ih e
I. viii .m G rey h o u n d s heal Freedom
Iliyh School Palriois ol Ht-llilt-lii-m.
P en n sy lv an ia. 22 0 m 1In* I tit It
a n n u a l Kolary How l as tpiarlerhaek
T o tltl C l e v e l a n d r a n l o r t w o
l o i i e h t l t i w i i s w h i l e 1t i r o w i n y
.mother.
The bowl victory seals a rem ark
able 7 1 season lor the Grevhountls
Lym an, which liatl won |usi ihn-e
yam es the previous two years, won
their III si two y a m e s ol the season
u n d e r llrsi-year eoaeh Larry Haker.
Alter losiny ilieir next three. Lyman
proved its early sueet-ss was no
llokf bv wltmliiy Its next lout bclote
tlropplny a iouylt yam e lo Lake
Hraniley Iasi Fritlav
"It was a yreat way to linisli out
the season." said Haker, who was
n am ed iln- Sanlortl Herald Coach til
Ihe Year on 'Thursday. "Tile season
h a s sort ol been like a rollercoaster.
Thank yoodness we yol ihe opporlunity lo reprieve ourselves alter
y o lu y d o w n a y a ln w ith Lake
Hraniley
" I'm |usi as proud as I t ail lie til
ihe c h a rac te r ol these kids. I have
three kills ol my own. but those kills
on my team 0111 m y sons. th e y ’re
pari ol m y family. We’ve li.ui to
mold loyether Ihrouyh som e dillleiili Hines, a n d we tl it I th a t."
S e n io rs C levelantl anti Hobby
W ashiiiytnn. w ho form L y m an 's
"tlynamii- d u o ." c a m e ihrouyh once
again. Clt-velautl. n a m e d L ym an 's
ollt-iislve player ol 1lit- yame. ran lor
91 y ard s am i threw for 78 on 9-ol-H
passiny. W ashinyton. Ilit- Sanlortl
ilerald Player ol Ihe Year, coutrihuleil 89 yards on 18 carries anti a
19-yard pass to Cleveland.
"All Ihe credit yot-s lo the of­
fensive line." salt! Washinyton. "II ll
w asn't lor them , we eouidn'l have
done what we did. I ca m e out (of
lilyh school) with my best year
overall an d I'm ylatl we linishi-d like
we did. I'm happy for the team and
ihe seniors."
Hut the win over Freedom w asn't
e a s y . L y m a n led o n l y 7 -0 al
halftim e, a n d was actu a lly outyained in total yardayc (290 2891
a n d first dow ns (13-10). Illy plays
m ade Ihe difference in Ihe closelyplayed contest.

H*r*ld Photo* by lOchtfd Hoptln*

While quarterback Matt Quartuch (above right) and his
Freedom High School team m ates (below) had the edge

L y m a n 's llrsi score t a m e on a
nine-play drive late In the first
q u arter. Clevelantl slrea k ln y nine
v a i d s to i h e e n d / o n e o n a
p iarlerhaek sneak. Tilt- G reyhound
iefense I hen wealheretl two Pal 1It it
Irlves insltle iln 20-yard line while
lie L ym an ollense w as shut mil
mill late in die 1liittI tpiarler.
" T h e ir delense played real well."

in yards gained over Lyman. Bobby Washington (No. 5.
above left) and Ihe Greyhounds p osted a 22-6 victory

said Cleveland, w ho was sacked
lour tim es an d pressured on nearly
every pass. "At Ihe hi-yiuulny ol the
yam e. they contained us on the
Inside. So we s tarted ru n n ln y up the
midtlle. a n d o u r nlfcnstvc line do­
t itled they were yoluy lo block. We
stepped loyether. ll was yootl It-am
work."
M u lw a v i h r o u y h t h e s e e o n tl

tpi.trier. Freedom pushed relcudU-ssly to L y m an 's elylil. Hill on
lorn tli d ow n, a s ee m ln y ly easy
louehdow n pass from quarterback
Mathew Q iiarlueh w as dropped
On lltelr llrsi drive ol tin- seeontl
hall
t h e P a t r i o t s m a d e It lo
L y m a n 's 19. L y m a n d e f e n s i v e
M.V.P. LaDaryl Fennev then sacked
S e e R o ta r y , P a g e 2 B

Olajuwon won battle but Shaq, Magic won game
By FRED QOODALL
A P Sports W riter

OKLANDO — Outplayed, hut not em barrasse d .
"I learned a little hit." Shaqullle O'Neal said
after losiny a n individual m atelu ip ayalusi
Hakeem Olajuwon while still Itelpiiiy the O rlando
Mayle stop th e H ouston B uckets' six yam e
w inning streak W ednesday iiiylil.
"I didn't do a lot toulyht a n d II we had lost. I'd
take a lot of blam e." the 20-year-old rookie said.
"Hill we won. so I'm happy. T he individual
battles don't m ailer. It's which team w on."
Olajuwon had 22 points. 13 re b o u n d s and live
ol H ouston's nine blocked shots. O'Neal al
tem pted only 12 shots from Ihe field, didn't shorn
a n y free throw s and m atch e d Ills season-low ol
12 points.
O rlando's 7 -foot-1. 303-pound ce nte r did have
13 rebounds, lliouyh. and blocked three shots
while altering n u m e ro u s others. In other words,
he didn't score hut he did do Ills Job.
"You know what lie looks like? A blyyei m e "
said O lajuw on. w h o 's listed al 7-fooi 255
pounds.

"A nd lie's so quick, so powerful. He w ants lo
yo lo tile basket, lie's yoluy lo yo lo the basket.
I've alw ays Im aylncd m yself a couple ol Incites
taller, a lot ol p o u n d s bigger. 'That s him ."
Olajuwon a n d O'Neal have the sam e agent and
winked mil loyether d u rin g ihe s u m m e r lo
prepare for Ihe season. The seven-lim e all-star
tauylil 1lie new co m er a ililny or two 1I11-11. and
again W ednesday night.
’Three of O lajuw on's blocks ca m e ayalusi
O'Neal a n d the Houston r e n te r scored seven of
Ills nine Held goals 011 Jum p shots. He also madta 7-loot Ju m p hook a n d faked O'Neal oil his feel
to drive the lane lor Ills only layup.
lie's .1 d y u a m tif playei
I have iiothlny but
eom pllm eiiis lor h i m " ( )la|uwon said.
" The only iliing lie doesn't hav e is experience,
and II doesn't lake long lo gel 1h. 1t. Once lie gels
Ihal. he h a s ll all."
Houston eoaeh Kudy Tomjanovioh was Im ­
pressed. too.
lie 's mu ihe laetor yet that H akeem or David
Kobiuson is. bin lei's give the guv a b re ak ." said
Tomfiiliovieh. w hose K nckcls had won six
si 1aighi since le iu ru in g hom e irom J a p a n where
Ihey losl 1hi III si I xvo gam es ol ihe season.

" l i e 's a p h en o m en a l player, being so youny
here In the llrst m o n th ol the season. Everything
I've seen about him is s u p e rb ."
T he 107-94 Iriiiuiph enabled the first-place
Mayle (9-3. .997 w inning percentage) lo rem ain
slightly ah ead ol the New York Kuieks (7-4. .934)
In tin- Atlantic Division.
" T h e y 'v e got all the Ingredients." Tnmjaiiovicll
said. "T h e y 'v e yol the Inside force, they've got
Ihe spot shooters, th ey 'v e got g u y s who can put
ll on llu- floor. T h e y 'v e yol a variety ol w eapons."
Scott Skiles had a season-high 30 points and
I I assists W ednesday night. D ennis Scott. I lor 9
Irom tlie Held In a loss m ihe Knlcks last
S aturday, scored 28 pom is a n d Nick Anderson
added 19 lor tin- Magic.
Meanwhile. O'Neal contained Olajuwon in the
1011r 1h q u a r t e r xvlu-n t h e H o u s t o n c e n t e r
m an ag e d only lour points — none belore the
Magic had huill a I-l point lead alter starling the
period lied 72 72
"W h o won the one-on-one?." said Orlando
eoaeh Mall Glinkas. "D on't know. Don't care. All
I care Is lh.il we played as a team . This Is a team
game, noi individual m a tc h u p s ."

�t f t - 8«nford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Friday, November 27, 1BB2

S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS
P in t r a n -S/i*.'Ci ti.M
4 Stormy south
u se t .« t oo
7 Swmm Evan Batter
440 4.30
t Shunhet Aglow
7.00
O (4-7) 44.41 P (4-MI) 7JI T (4-M) 1477.44
P (AIM) MO
Secead race-1/0. Ot M.74
SOoldan Karma
«.« 3JO n c
4 Magic Charmer
7.40 3.40
I Summ Blltt
S.40
Q (44) 17JO P (4-4) B.M T (4-4-1) I33J4 DO
(4-4) IVjM • 104-1-3) 34714
Third race—1/14. D: 31.34
cBiuagrettSen
n.40 10 40 13.30
7Clty Franchtoe
4.00 400
3 Wild RandM
4.40
Q (4-7) N.40 P (4-7) 0.30 T (4-7-3) 13t1.N
Paartb race -1/14, Mt 31.M
SJudgaRubyOuaan
7JO 1.30 3.40
1Dlb't Duda
S00 4J0
4 R c'i Block Back
M0
Q (II) 14JIP C4-1) 3440 T (4-14) IM J0
PHRlraM — P it, Dt 31.41
4 Bob'* Na|o
10.30 4JO 3JO
IHvtkarPerdlta
4.40 M 0
4 Wattoy Crvt
MO
Q (14) I tJI P (4-1) 13M0T (4-M) I7SJ4
t t i* raca-7/14. Dt 43J t
3 Bahna Dixie Dawg
3JO 3.10 MO
7KI1tyOuni moka
3J0 MO
1 Spark Of Wlidom
M0
O (t-7) 1M0 P (17) 14JIT (t-7-1) M JI
Savaalbraca— 4/14. B130.77
lTaaharlia
0.00 M 0 4J0
4 F tooting Paal
4.30 M O
I Flying ieneva
3.30
O (M ) I7J0 P (3-4) 11JO T 114-1) 134.34 S
(14-14) in 40
tlg M brata -i/1 4 . Ot II JO
7 Mary11 Feel
9J0 M 0 M 0
I Tim TIM

0(1-1) 11.44 P (3-1) 71.14T (3-14) 347J t
111bP M
INapaForurla
1540 7JO 3.00
1 Frle* Victor
4.00 3.00
4 Durango-Andy
v.40
O ( M l SM0 P (1-1) 1N JIT 0-14) SMJ0
1ilk pm a
3 Aremayo Victor
31.00 7.40 M 0
SMandibe-Arratoia
4.40 3.40

1Pordo-Rtyot

Nofra Dam# (t-M )a l South,m Cot tt-JI),
Ella. Pori.
Toraor.Orl.
Corbin. Utah
Robloton. Port.

Cal St. -Fultorton (1-0 at UNLV (S4)

).M

O (1-1) 47.44 P (4-1) 1MJ4 T IM-1) 4M.M
QO tl-I A 0-AM) M JI (13 A I-All) M JI
lArTatola
7.00 4.10 4.40
1 Bob
1.10 M 0
4 Victor
0(1-1) te w P (1-1) B4.W T 11-14) 4M.M

FAR W IST
PiHtburgh at Hawaii, Night
PAR B U T
Kama* SI. vt. Nobratkaot Tokyo. Night

o
AHantk Dtvtoton
W
0
7
S
4
4
1

L
1
4
7
4
7
4

Pet.
J47
.434
.417
.4M
J44
J»

Stockton. Utah
Hardaway, O.S.
M. Jack ton, LAC
• I . BeguoxChar.
Adam*. W ith.
_
Cato*, Mia.
William*. Minn.
i'r
Sklto*. Ort.
tto
Throatf, LAL
i
Murdock, M il.
i

ttS

K

m

n u n i -

m

m

a.

contract* at Rich RBbrtwn. Mertona M to*
Santa*. John Hap*. Ertm
«n4 Mika
Zimmerman, gttrttor*: Katth Thwr
ftoMtrj and Jo m Undarat. InttoMar.
BASKETBALL
BOSTON CELTICS -W alvad Bart Krtaod.
ORLANDO MAO 1C - StoMd U
WUIIomi, tafwafd — tor- N b m E

WtRtom*,Nr*mrd,aaltoto*aradllrt.

O’Neel.Ort.
Ololuwon. Hou.
Borkloy, Phoo.
K.Malono, Utah
Ewing, N.Y.
Coloman, N.J.
Willi*. A ll.
Salhaly.Mia.
RcWnton, S.A.
Mutgmbo.O«n.

■ Otoe-Don
41.30 11.40 0J0
S Durango-Enrique
0.00 11.10
7Mlket-Reya*
0.00
O (14) 7M0 P (44) B0.74T 14-4-7) 1117.10 S
(M-AM-AM) 147.10 DO O-AII) 31.74
A-N4; M—174,134

’T

leturdw , Ooc. I
BOOT
Army v». Navy at PHIaMIphla

n, Mil.
K. Malone, Utah
Owont, Q.S.
Carr, S.A.
Parry, Phil.

ftolM r*. Oft ana year MRtract*.
__
M ONTREAL E X P O ! - Sant Dm iW M t,
anchor, outright to O1*wo at the Interne-

10
11

All Tima* 1ST
W A LK SC O N FER IN C !
rirn C T DtViMPl
w L TP t* OP OA
Pltttburgh
14 1 1 33 10S IS
NY Ranger*
11 9 1 14 M •4
Now Jon ty
11 10 0 31 4S 71
Wellington
9 11 1 10 SO 79
Philadelphia
0 9 4 30 09 N
NY lilandan
0 10 3 19 77 It
AMmtDhrtotoa
Montreal
14 1 3 IS 104 71
Quft&amp;ftc
11 4 1 31 109 M
Batton
It 4 3 14 04 71
Butteto
4 10 4 tt 103 as
Harttord
S IS 1 11 44 93
Ottawa
a to 1 4 49 lit
CAM PBELL CONFERENCE
llaart*
norm Mi^iaMd
im rtwn
W L TPt* OP OA
Detroit
14 9 0 tt IN M
Minnesota
It 9 1 14 70 Tt
Toronto
10 9 1 33 49 4S
Chicago
10 10 3 11 73 71
10 13 1 tt M 99
Tampa Bay
SI. Laul*
0 11 3 19 03 100

m iij
IIS 10.S

11 104
11 105
10 10
10 03
9 74
9 71
9 71
10 77

9J
9.3
1.0
B3
0.1
7.1
7.9
7.7

Buffalo
Indlanapoll*
N .Y. Jot*
Now England

KahtMCIty
SonDiogo
l Roldan

T Ed Slmmana (knee) ara MertlwuM*: T t
Tarry Orr IknM). 0 Ntork Sc*Mn R&gt; (knM).
DE F n d Stoka* (tow ) era *rah to ll.
T A M P A M V VS. M I E N B A Y at
Milwaakn - h m M rti DE Ray Seal*
(knee-ln|urad ratarvrt. LB Calvin Tlggto
(ankle-ln|ured ratarvrt ara out: S Darrall
Fulllngton (knaa). LB Itoggto Eumatto (rlb»)
era guarttonabto; CB-SMarty Carter (grain).
OB Vlnrry Tattavarda (knM). DT Santana
D elian (ankla), DE DT M ark Whaetor
(ankla). DT Keith McCant* (knM) ara
prMafcli. Packer*: CB Laroy Buttor (riba). C
Jama* Ci mpon (arm), RB Darrall Thempton
(ankla) ara prababto.
CHICAOO AT CLEVELAN D - Baarn RB
Oarran Lewi* tanka I. S Shaun Gay la
(ibawMar), DE Tim * e n (lag), DE Traca
Armttrong (knM) era probable. B ro w n S
Eric Tumor (ankle) It quarttonabto; DE Rob
Burnett (flu), WR Mldtaol Jack ton (tog). CB
Prank Minn11told (grab) am probable.
MIAMI A T NEW ORLEANS - Datpbta*:
C E Vo*too Jack ion (moo-Murod rotary*) it
outi I Bobby Harden (nip), LB John
Oftordahl (abdamoto, C J*tt Uhtonhefce
(ankle) am M w tlanMN; CB Kerry Gtonn
(guodrtcog) N p n hobla Sototoi T Stan Brack
(toa) to dwbttut; LB M Smaanga (hand) l*
quwttonMta) LB D E Atond Wtnaton (knM),
R B F r e d McAtoa (vlru*), W R P R Pat
"

* B M LA R D AT ATLAN TA - Petrt“ I Oirt* Ganran (ankto), OB
(ahauMw). C E David Paal (hip), r e
I (hlpt. LB Andm Tippett
), D E draft William* (kMO/hlp)
euettlanabl*. Pa lean*: R E stava
nerd (wrtot). S ScaN Cam (chart). T
Out* Hinton (knM), WR Tany Jane* (ham
rtrtng), WR Jaaan PNIIIpt (knM), S Lout*
R lddicktohartW r), S Etoart Sholtoy (grain)
n ew

A M kELR I RAIDERS A T SAN DtBBO
: DT Willto Broughton (toa). WR
. Charger*:
(ankto). LB

La* Angato*
Calgary
Vftf&gt;C0HV9T
Edmonton
Wtonlgog
Sanjata

IS
11
13
7
7
3

4
0
9
11
11
14

1
1
3
4
3
1

t t MS *2
SO 94 79
tt 104 V
14 44 91
14 70 93
11 41 too

wwmrwi §, nwiRHU i
Ouaboc 1, Buffalo t.flo
Ottawa 3. Now Jonoy I
Now York Rongor* II, Plfftburgh 3
Detroit 11, SI. Lo u lit
a a &amp; A k a i i •*
WHIHlipilPI W
f ■ OV'Wl 2

Vancouver A Mkwweefs 1
Son J o m A Calgary 1, OT
La* Angolot A Edmonton 1
Tbondoy'i Oarntt
(Awbac A Toronto A C T
SI. Laul* 7, Vancouver S
PrMaykOomo*
Now York ItlonM e al Phllodolphla, 1:10
P-m.
Hartford at Eat ton, 1 40p.m.
Lo* Angola* ot Dotrdt. 7:40 p m .
Ottawa at Buffalo. 7*0a.m.
Now York Ranger* N MinnoMte. 1:10p.m.
Pittoburgh ot Wathlivton. I: top.m.
San J o m at Winnipeg, l :40p. m.
TaMpe Boy at Calgary. t»M pm .
Chicago at Edmonton. 9:40p.m.
Borton at Harttord. 7:40 p.m.
Now Jomoy at Quebec. 7:41 p.m.
Philadelphia al Now York lilanM r*. 7:
p.m.
Wa*Mngton at Plfftburgh, 7:41 pm .
Vancouver at Monhael, 0:10 p.m.
T oomo Boyat Rdm M ton.liM p.in.
Lm Angela* at Tororte. 1:10pm .
Chicago at Calgary,1:10pm.
San J o m at Mkwietrta. •: W pm .
Detroit at St. Lout*. B 40 pm .
___
____
Buffalo at OHaw a.l:Bp.m .
auumiu* j n ■ jn w e t—
W M to m
U .

Todd Wltoken, Ztontvllb. Ind.. 4-3.44.
Jamd Patawr, SaddMraah, M t. Mauri ce
Rurti. Vanaiueta, 44.41.
Chrtrtlan I*menu. Gtrmany, dot. R M irto
A ia r. Argentina, 4-3, 44.
LaanarM Lavelto. Mexico, drt. Martin
Sinner. 4-3.7-4.
Daniel O rtank, Argentina, drt. Ptortan
Krumray. *-1,4-1.
Oartd Wttt, JackwartAa Beech. drt. Orant
Stattord. South Africa, 41. (4-7) 44.
J o m Cunha-Silva, Mrtugal, drt. Sergio
Carte*. Chile. 4-t. 4-1.
Haracto M la Pane. Argantlna. drt. Tammy
Ma, WMNr Novae. 44 4 4 .

PHOENIX SUNS - Aetlvatod Jarrad
M uttal. forward, tr*m the ln|urad Hat.
Walvad Atox Stlvrtn*. toward.
SACRAMENTO KINBS - TraM d Vmeant
Arttaw, guard, to the toattto SMOrSonlcs tor
a conditional IfflM cand round draft pick.
SEA TTLE SWPERSONtCS - Walvad Stava
•OwTTBfi CTnlfT»
UTAH JAZZ - Adlvatod Mark Eaton,
cantor, tram tha Inftrad Itot. Walvad Thn
Lag tor, guard.
POOTBALL
LOS ANORLES RAMS -

ntTryi W19WrwCwiVwTe

MIAMI DOLPHINS -

Hgntd Emlto
PMcad Voatoa

IE IOTA VIKIMIS - Placed Brad
Culgaggar. M tontlva tackla, and Orag
Manutky. Ilntbackar, an tnlurad raaarva.
Signed David Bavara. Ilnabackar, and Etora
Tuaato, drtanrtva lactoa.
NEW YO RK JETS - Amteuncad tha
retirement at Al Toon, wtM raealvar.

AUTO RACING
la .m . — ESPN. Indy Light* Chamgton*hig
BASKETBALL
7:14 p.m. — II, NBA, OrtanM at Indiana.
(LI
7:10 p.m. — ESPN. Praw tian NIT Champtonahlp, Satan Hall va Indiana. (LI
* :X p.m. — ESPN. Grart Alaaka Shaatout
•amlflnal*. (L), alto atmMnlght
BOXIHO
•:ttp.m . — SUN. Tto Bart at Britain
POOTBALL
7p.m. — CV, High Ktaol Rrtary Bawl
C O U R S E VO LLEYBALL
I p.m. — SC, Alabama at Ftortde. alto at
midnight
1.1,11
NTVfVBf
AUTO RAC INO
4 p .m .-T N N . Pantry MO
B A S IB A U
1 p.m. — SC. Senior Owmptomhip Oam*
C O LLR B I BASKETBALL
I p.m. — ESPN. Qxvwdkut v*. Purdue,

(U

&gt;— ESPN, Oraot Alatka Shaatout
rtiiriiaLw*ihia
ftjifM Wf
ft 1
totiwilywanw wvrTWf
NBA BASKETBALL
7 :li p.m. — SUN, Otvotand at Orlande.
(L)
^ 7:35 p.m .— TBS, M iant at Atlanta, (L)
Co l l i b e p o o t b a l l
H :10 a.m. - ESPN. CMtoga OemoOey
Naan - W FTV «, PbrtM at PtorMa Stato,
(L)
11:11 pm . - WESH 1 II. T w w om m at
Vandy. (L)
1p.m. — SUN. Rtaaat Haurtan, (L).atoaat

1am*.

4 p.m. — ESPN. Gmrgia Tech at Ooargta.

7:30 pm . — ESPN. M am l at San Dtogo St..
(L)
0 p.m. - W FTV 9. Nrtre Dame at U S C (L)
11:30p.m.— SC, PtofMa a l PtortM Stato
3:10 p.m. — W FTV O.tktna Gama, (L)
OLYMPICS
4:30 p.m. - WCPX 4 Otympto Wtotortart:
CawMMm to LUtobOMnar
CO LLEG E VO LLSVBALL
I p.m .— SUN. SWC OwmptontMp
3 a.m. — SUN. BIpEBht Champ IwwhIp
BASKETBALL
Tim p m . - W DBDAM (ISO). OrtanM
Maple at Indiana Pp m * , progamo l:M pm .
HOCKEY
9:30 pm . - W OTDAM ( M ), NHL. ToflWO
Bay Ltohtmng at Calgory Flame*
AUSCELLANIOUS
0 p.m. - WWNZ-AM DM), IpartiTrtk
4 p m . - WOTO-AM (Itt), Talk Sport*
A R IN A P O O TB A U
!:M pm . - WOTO AM (4M), ExMMItoni
OrtanM PraM tor* v*.Patratt Drive at Part*
BASKETBALL
7 :» pm . - W DBOAM (MO). Ctovrtand
Cavalier, at OrtanM M agk. prigam* 4:44

pm .
R ikard Bargh, BaaM n. and Trovar
K w w m iia . I n b i l a , drt. Haracto M u
Pane. Argantlna. md Nicola* Pom lra.
Venezuela, 4-17-4 (4).

C O LLIB B POOTAAU.
Naan - W D BO AM (MS). P torIda at
PtortM Stato. pragam* it 10:30 am .
7:30 pm . - W TLNAM (1130), NUaml at
San Dtogo Stato
0 p m . - W OTOAM (SM), Natra Dama at
Southern Cal. joined In pogroM

HOCKEY

10:M p-m . -

N IW
mom

YORK - T ie National Football
Injury report N r Ndt weak'* fame*

B U FFA LO A T INMAMAPOAtS - BBtoi
LB SRana Canton (mAto) to auaattonabtoi
WR Stouo Taakor (hanrt.CB Jama* Wllllem*
(ceN) am pmkW Ii. Wttoi OB m
~
(rifM
N out: O Ran

Rotary

’Notes ca tch G ators in squeeze
NOTABYBOW L
LYM AN tt. PR B I DOM 4

good, (bough."
Cleveland made the botched
opportunities hurt. On the next
snap after Fenncy 'a Bach, he cut
left, brake aeveiai tacklea. and
ra k e d fre e , fo r a 7 4 -y a rd
to u c h d o w n . Freedom h ead
coach Jody Cwfli later called tt
"one of the beat runs I've seen
all Beacon."
Washington than dove into the
corner of the end tone for the
tw onoint convwakm.
“r o e offensive line held them
real well." said Cleveland of
what be saw on the touchdown
nift. "I atunted to one aide.

|J(7-1) N M tttlielppi (7-3)
(74) at Vmdwbffl (44)
SOUTH *IST
R ka (44) at Howrton(!-7)
Praane St. (74) at Texaa-EI Po m (14),
Night
PAR WRIT
Tutoa (44) at Hawaii (B-S). Night
(144)rtSM M agiM .(44-1),N W M

I

I

I

t

I
!

t-

i

■ ri
ABBociatod Frau Writer

7 - tt

TALLAHASSEE — Third-ranked Florida Stale
probably found ltae)f in a favorable position
for the next few y ean In Its rivalry with Florida.
The Seminotes. needing a win Saturday to keep
their flickering national title hopes alive, appear
In an advantageous aUuation Saturday and coach
Bobby Bowden doesn’t mind one bit.
The teams have traditionally had a week off
L before playing the weekend after Thanksgiving,
W but the advent of the Southeastern Conference
33-110
gBmc has c h an ^ d the landscape.
744
ft
By winning tfc eastern dlviaion of the SEC. the
H U
O
aton
have games on both sides of Florida State.
M
And U could stay that way for a few more years.
"I would thli* tt*B to our advantage to catch
them when we’* catching ’em ." admits Bowden,
whose team is a 16-point favorite coming off an
open week. "We’re ready to play a ball game,
especially with a week off."
The rivalry also changes In other ways since
Florida State (B-l) Is coming off Its first Besson In
the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Semlnoles
swept through an eight-game, conference sched­
ule unscathed, losing their only game 10-10 al
toed the fam e when, Miami when a last-second (kid goal for a tie sailed
it.
left to play. Cleveland
pride la also a t stake when the two
threw • 33-yard touchdown |
kick off at 13:10 p.m. Saturday in a
to Washington, making the i
game televised nationally
33-0.

ir - ■ * - * 4 '

.4sw*'

No. 6 Florida (S-3) hopes to build its winning
streak to eight gunes going into next week’s SEC
title game agalmt Alabama for a Sugar Bowl trip.
"We want to beat Florida State, and we want to
beat Alabama,” said Florida quarterback Shane
Matthews, who like coach Steve Spurrier la 1-1
against the Semlnoles. "Hopefuly we can atari
both this week."
Florida baa lost Just once wfthln the state’s
boundaries since Steve Spurrier took over three
seasons ago. That was a 45-30 defeat In
Tallahassee two y ean ago.
The Gators grined revenge last season with a
14-9 victory In Qalnesville. but this year’s game to
sandwiched between Florida's conference finale
and the SEC title game.
"I'm aura the players haven't forgotten those
old rivalries." mid Bowden. "We’d sure want to
win the ball game Just as good as we could.’
Bowden is 8 4 against the Gators, but had won
four straight uniitu last
s' defeat. A win
would also make Bowden the first major college
coach to have won 10 games or more In sue
consecutive seasons.
"The last two weeks we have really clicked."
said Bowden, whose team rolled up 139 points in
wins over Maryland and Tulare. "I think the
game grill tell you how dose we are to clicking.
We would have to click like mad to beat these
folks, to beat tb sn good."

W OTOAM

(SMI. NHL,
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, November 27, 1992 - SB

People
baking problems
important role in success of product

RSVP luncheon a success
SANFORD — Forty-three members of the Sanford chapter of
RSVP and their guests recently attended a luncheon at the
Sanford Senior Center.
Florida Power and Light furnished the refreshments for the
luncheon.
Beverly Wells, director of the group, talked about the
advantages of RSVP while others talked about the areas In
which they work.
Other speakers were Sylvia Lormann, Hill Haven Nursing
Home: Jan ls Ellis. Salvation Army: Bobble Bullington.
Seminole County Bar Association and Barbara Ivey, HRS.

BARBARA
HUGHES/
GREGG

Optimists ssll Christmas trass

tin-plated steel Is used for many commercial
baking utensils. A non-stick coating will
hasten the baking process. However, care
must be taken not to scratch the surface or
It will rust. Porcelain provides a harder layer
of protection. However. It does not offer the
advantage of a non-stick surface. Other
drawbacks of a porcelain coating are
moderate heat conductivity and poor crusts
on bread.

LAKE MARY — The Lake Mary Optimist Club has Christmas
trees for sale at the Shoppes of Lake Mary on North Country
Club Road and Lake Mary Boulevard.
The annual Christmas tree fund benefits the youth of the
community.

Sanford Stnlors to mast
SANFORD — The Sanford Senior Citizens will meet at noon
on Tuesday. Dec. 1.
There will be a catered luncheon In honor of the new officers
of the group who were elected last month.
Tickets for the luncheon, which are available for 91 to club
members, are required for admittance to the luncheon.
After the luncheon there will be a sing-along.
For more Information, call Helen Lutz at 323-B006.

Once you've come up with the proper
tools, how about the proper helpers? While
few of today's cookie monsters will actually
become tomorrow's pastry chefs, most
children are intensely interested in food. It's
one of their greatest pleasures. “Children
love learning to cook when parents can take
time with the project. Fixing their own food
develops self-esteem and helps many fussy
eaters accept new foods."

Posts to talk vsrss
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.

Sanford Rotations to mast

No two children are alike develop­
mental^. however, so cooking activities
must be tailored to each child. Safe food
handling practices, of course, are Important
for all age groups.

Rotary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Halp for gamblsrt offarad

Vfc-3 T a a rO ld s
• Wash fruits and vegetables • Peel
bananas • Stir batters • Slice soft foods
with table knife (cooked potatoes, bananas)
• Pour • Fetch cans from low cabinets •
Spread with a knife (soft onto firm) • Use
rotary egg beater (For a short time) •
Measure (e.g., chocolate chips Into 1 cup
measure).
4-B T sa r O M s
• Grease pans • Open packages • Peel
carrots • Set table (with Instruction) •
Shape dough for cookies/hamburger patties
(Caatteat children not to put their hands in
their mouths while handling raw ham­
burger meat. It can carry harmful bacteria.
They should wash hands after shaping
patties.) • Snip fresh herbs for salads or
cooking • Wash and tear lettuce for salad,
separate broccoli, cauliflower • Place top­
pings on pizza or snacks.

• Take part in planning part of or entire
meal • Set table (with less supervision) •
Make a salad • Find Ingredients In cabinet
or.splce rack • Shred cheese or vegetables
• Garnish food • Use microwave, blender
or toaster oven (with previous Instruction) •
Measure ingredients • Present prepared
food to family at meal • Roll and shape
cookies.
9-19 T aar O lds
• Depending on previous experience,
plan and prepare an entire meal.
The Cooperative Extension Service is
open to all regardless of race, color, creed or
national origin.

Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon for family and friends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p.m.. Church of the Good Shepherd. 331 Lake Ave,, Maitland.
For more Information, call 236-9206.

Widow wants suitors
to keep ‘hands o f f
D E A R A M T : WIU you please
tell me why most men think that
just because a woman Is a
widow, she's sex-starved andready to Jump Into bed with the
first m a n who a s k s her?
1 have dated several eligible
bachelors and I enjoy going to
din n er and lunch, but the
minute they get me alone, they
have six hands — and I have to
defend myself.
They say, “All women like to
be fondled and petted." Abby. I
am an older widow — still
attractive — and I enjoy conversing with men. Why don't
they realize that two people
should get acquainted, and if
they enjoy each other’s company. perhaps In time the sparks
will fly. If not. back offl Why
spoil a good friendship by being
an octopus?
I am neither sex-starved nor
lonely. I enjoy good company
and a man's point of view on
various sublects. I have tried to

The one man I could really go
for has done nothing but give me
a hug and an occasional kiss. I'll
choose a gentleman anytime.
Please print this, Abby. I have
four men In mind who need to
learn this.

octopuses you have In mind.
D E A R A B R T i Some time ago.
I was In a large drugstore with
my infant son. There was a
woman In the store with two
boys who looked to be about 3 to
6 years old.
The older boy look a couple of
steps away from his mother and.
in a small voice, asked a clerk,
"Do you have any toys?" His
,mother yanked him to her and
shook him roughly by his neck.

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AOVICS
------------------ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

■
yelling at him and using a lot of
filthy language. The other boy
Just stood by quietly, while his
brother cried. This made the
mother angrier, so she continued
to shake him.
1 was stunned. My heart ached
and I wanted to cry. There were
other people who saw this, but
nobody did anything,
If that woman could do that in
public, it made me wonder how
ishe treats her children at home. I
regret not having said some*
thing. Was there anything I
could have done?
D EA R SORRY: I have received
letters such as yours many times
over the years. This w u my
reply:

you witnessed Involved a person
out of control. You could have
very gently and quietly at-

that age shopping Is more than
we can handle." Without being
Judgmental. In a soft and sympatheUc tone, you would have
Intervened and brought an out-of-control woman back to real!ty.
Readers, there Is now a tollfree N atio n al C hild A buse
Hotline (In the U.S.A.) for adults
to cal) when they feel they are
losing control. Dial 1-600-42244S3.

Family Practice T

' n _ i.

* «
a l e _ ~ .ii u
n i. n i
Dr’s. —
Hardwick
ft
Snell M.D/s
PA. *
712 W. 25th St.
Sanford, FL 32771

A n Pleased to Announce That 7b
Better Serve Working Families We Have

EXPANDED H O U RS
Now Open 2 Evenings Per Week TUI
7 PM A Saturday Mornings 9 - 1 2

FuU

ServiceFamily Medicine
322-6472

Girl wants her father
home when she visits
DEAR MARTI I go to my dad'*
house every other weekend. 1
want to go there because It's the
only time I get to see him, but
every time Pm there the same
thing happens. We spend time
together during the day. but at
night he always goes out and
leaves me alone. I'm old enough
to stay alone, but 1 Just get
lonely and sometimes a little
scared. I've asked him to stay
home on the evenings I'm there,
but he says parents have to have
time with their friends, Just like
kids do. and that's the only time
he has. I don't want to atop
seeing him. but I don't like this
either. 1don't know what to do.
D E A R LO N E LY : Since we
can't change your dad. let's see
what you can do to take care of
yourself. First, you might try one
more time to explain to him that
since you only see him every
other weekend, you really wish
he could save an evening for
you, at least occasionally. Since
you can expect that at least on
some weekend nights you are
going to be alone when you visit
him. be sure to take some
games, videos or books so you
can create your own fun. Finally,

IIK Q U

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BARN to now owned by:
BRENDA W. TOMPKINS

you may want to tell him that
when he's going out, you want
to have a friend spend the night
with you. You will probably feel
a lot better when you have made
your plana for taking care of
your needs while visiting your
dad.

W ith Fond Memories,
D O IT IE PEARSON

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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida » Friday, November 27, 1902 -

i i' .yi * O' n

3*.- y
_ —

Society to hot mlttlonarftt
SANFORD - H is to ric Jam es AME Church's Annie McOlll
Missionary Society will hoot all missionaries. Sunday at 3:30
p.m.
The theme la "One Hundred Christian Women and Men,
Called, Committed. Compelled to Serve."
The words or Inspiration will be delivered by Missionary
Bonita R. Sherman, a member, of New Life Word Center. The
community la Invited to worship.

Mtdknral fttllval Mt
SANFORD — On Sunday Holy Cross Episcopal Church will
sponsor a medieval festival, advent lessons and carols at 4:30
p.m. featuring Holy Cross choir and musicians followed by a
medieval dinner. 92.90 for adults. 92 for children under 12
years.

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Holy C ro if Episcopal Church.
First Praabytarlan and 8t. Paitr'a
Episcopal spaln joined forest for
an tvanlnc of faltowahip and
thanks during Its Oraca ’N Grits
Thanksgiving Dlnnsr Wsdnesdcy
svanlng. Tha dlnnar aitractad
over 200 people, right, to dine on
turitay and all tha trimmings.
Volunteers, below, filled plates
and served tha guests of the
p ro g ra m . B o b and B a ttle
aonrtenbtrg, two of the coordi­
nators of the program, cooked,
cls a n s d , served end mads
everyone feel very welcome.

Aealltomlnlttm
All Seminole County ministers available to give Uie
Invocation at the Board of County Commission meetings held
on the second and fourth Tuesdays are asked to register their
names and phone numbers by calling Carylon Cohen. Office of
County Commission Records, at 32 M 130. extension 7661.

, First Advtnt ettotorated
Church. United Church
LAKE MARY - Christian Fell
of Christ, will celebrate the first
of Advent on Sunday
with Pastor A. Arthur Arvsy presetting on "A Light in the
Darkness." The church will begin the special program of
member families lighting the advent wreath during the
worship service. Visitors are welcome. Worship services are
conducted at 10 a.m. at the Lake Ifeuy Community Building.
260 N, Country Club Road. Lake Mary. For more Information,
call 323-3119.

Vy'
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Foreign missions MghMghM
LAKE MARY — First Baptist Church Markham Woods. 6400
Markham Woods Road will be havtag Nrvfoes on Sunday at
10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. The observance Of Week of Prayer for
Foreign Missions will begin on Sunday. On Wednesday. Dec. 2
at the 7 p.m. service. Foreign Missions wfU be highMtfntad fo •
suidy^flven by Brad Parker. Nursery provided; DetaMot

Advsnt ssason bsgins
OVIEDO — The Advent season begins on Sunday and to
•* herald the coming of the Christmas season, a Day of Reflection
is offered to.the people of Central Florida on Monday from 9:30
a.m. to 4 p.m.. Canterbury Retreat 6 Conference Center. 1601
Alafaya Trail.
Entitled "Preparing for the Holy Days Ahead." this Day of
Reflection will be spei
spent in spiritual preparation for
days ahead.
Leader for this event la Karen Howe, wife of Diocese of
Central Florida Bishop John Howe, and director of cathedral
tapes. Karen was the leader for the ' ’Lord, Tkach us to Pray"
Retreat held at Canterbury in 1990.
Cost for the day Is 919 per person and includes lunch) 910
for elders fovetOpl including lunch
r» ;v 3

. 4"I'M*! fUtri

f u n i i i i of Seminole Baptist Association express f*1*"^* to
dentists and their assistants who gave of their time to share in
a needy ministry:
,
"We the people cf Seminole Baptist Association wish to
thank publicly the following dentists and thetr assistants wbo
gave their time and talents to help us see 102 patients that had
bad dental problems.
At our dental mobile unit In Pierson the following dentists
worked. Dr. Diane Raggard Wright drove all the way from
Brandon to be part of the work. Hats off to you Dr. W right Dro.
Herminla Rodrlquex/Ramos of Orange City. Ron and HoUle
Tlllitxky of BartoervlUe, and BUI Knapke of DeLand also very
graciously donated their time.
At our dental clinics in Sanford Elementary Schools. On.
William Runge of Sanford. WUUe Sherman of Sanford/Ortando,
E.W. Zwicker of DeLand and Joseph Calderone of DeBary very
generously participated.
We do appreciate your Ume and efforts to make these clinics
worthwhile. We are sure the patients you aaw also appreciated
your work and service. Any other dentists in our area who
would like to be a part of this ministry. please call MarytUen
Perkins, director, at 407-974-9700."

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SANFORD T- Mayor Bettye
Smith proclaimed National Bfbie
Wee*. Nov. 22-29. for the City of
S anford,. a t th e re q u e st of
Buck, i-MpMln
Beatrice Buck.
‘
‘ Qf sal
Harrison Chapter. Daughters
D tu fh tc n of
tout Revolution,
the American
The DARt Is
to a sponsor
of the
apor
ervance during
d
52nd observance
the
w eek o f T hanksgl
h a n k sg iv in g . Its
purpose to to remind all Ameri­
cans of the Bible's importance to
Individuals and in the history.
Ufe and culture of America as
well as to motivate Increased
reading and study of the Bible,
according to Buck.
National ch airm an of the
eight-day event to Betty Duds, of
Oviedo, She selected the suged Bible readings for .each
. eight from the Old Testa­
ment and eight' from the New
Testament.
She was honored at the Annu­
al intetfotth Bible Week I
ml Iui^ Imwi this week at
Pierre Hotel in Hew York City

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Chiles: Clinton can begin health care reform now
TALLAHASSEE - BUI Clinton's pre­
sidency could start Immediately fulfilling
his campaign promise to reform the nation's
health care system by loosening federal
restrictions on the states. Gov. Lawton
Chiles said.
It will take time to develop a national plan,
but the president and the Congress can
waive requirements on programs such as
Medicaid and Medicare to allow states to try
their own solutions. Chiles said this week.
"I think Clinton will understand this. He
needs to do something. He cannot go with a
national plan right now. This la a step that
he could take and allow us to go down the
road," Chiles said.
The former three-term U.S. senator will
travel to Washington next, week for a
two-day meeting on health care sponsored
by the National Governors Association. He
also plans to meet with Dr. Judith Feder.
director of health policy for Clinton's
transition.

An NOA task force plana to make
recommendations to Clinton on how to
bring down health care costa and provide
access to millions of Americans who have no
health Insurance but aren't covered by a
government program. In Florida, that
number Is estimated at 2.6 million.
“We don't want all the discussions on a
national plan that may go on a long time to
stow down the momentum we've got here."
said Doug Cook, director of the state Agency
for Health Care Administration.
Chiles wants the federal government to
loosen some of Its grip on health care
programs. Far example, the governor has
proposed separating Medicaid from welfare

have no health coverage." he said. "We
would have all the pieces of the market."
Congress. Chiles added, could require that
self-insured companies meet health care

standards set by the states instead of
forbidding any regulation, os Is currently
the cose. If the companies didn’t meet the
standards, the states could threaten to enact
tougher regulations,
’’Without the ability to regulate the
selMnsurers, we lose all of our stick," Chiles
said.
Without such waivers, Chiles said Florida
may never meet Its goal to bring down cost
and provide health care access to all by the
end of 1094.
"The only way are can fulfill that Is to
have the federal government untie our
hands." he said;
Beyond that. Chiles hopes to persuade
Clinton and the new Congress to allow the
states flexibility In whatever national health
care reform la finally passed.

Transition: Foreign policy goes on hold
An AP News Analysis

for an eighth round of talks to
begin Dec. 7.
There are no concrete re­
s u lts a fte r 13 m onths or
bargaining and none appears
to be in the immediate offing.
Former Secretary of State
Jam es A. Baker til. who set up
the negotiations, has moved to
the White House and la not
actively Involved, and other
A m e ric an d ip lo m a ts a re
maintaining a low profile.
There could be good tactical
reasons. Arabs and Israelis are
n o t c lo se e n o u g h to a n ,
agreement for Baker or other
Intermediaries to step in.
Still, the Arabs, at least, are
calling for American Interven­
tion and threatening to con­
sider walking out if there is no
progress three or four months
into the Clinton administra­
tion.
Nunn, looking for reasons
for the vacuum in U.S. foreign
policy, said Bush was feeling
the strain of his election loss
and the death of his mother.
The president is tired and
withdrawn, the Georgian told

WASHINGTON — The world
wilt not wait for (he United
States to change presidents
but there is mounting evidcnce the Bush administration
Is Just marking time, drifting
indecisively in.its foreign pollcy.
Two senior senators. Demoerst Sam Nunn of Oeorgia and
Republican Richard Lugar of
Indiana, suggested gently In a
Capitol Hill news conference
W ednesday th a t som eone
better take charge.
Nunn and Lugar are Just
back from visiting five former
Soviet republics. They seemed
mast concerned about controls
on nuclear weapons and mate-,
rial.
Nunn said that In Belarus
some uranium may have been
smuggled out and that officials
told him smugglers had been
Intercepted In several other
cases.
The chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Committee
called the situation alarming.
N u n n a n d L u g a r w ere
sponsors of legislation last

allege a violation of the no-fly
rone the United Nations set up
to protect Bosnian Muslims,
Department officials have
been saying for weeks they are
trying to determine whether
the planes and helicopters
were on military missions.
Finding violations would
require a decision on what to
do abou t it. T hat Is not
something the United States or
Its European alltea want to
dealwlthjlght now.
In the arms control field, the
understanding Bush reached
last summer with Russian
President Boris Yeltsin to
make sharp reductions In
long-range nuclear weapons
still has not been translated
into a treaty,
The Idea was to cut down to
3,000 to 3,800 on each aide by
2003 or sooner. If the United
Statea helped foot part of
Ruaala'a bill, and to eliminate
all land-baaed multiwarhead
systems,
The Russians have raised
questions about bow to lmptement the big reduction, and

collect, secure and dismantle
nuclear weapons. But the
process has proceeded slowly.
Nunn said the “clock I*
ticking.''
In other areas, as well, the
Bualt administration appears
to be marking time.
The one serious exception to
Somalia, where, responding to
waminga that a quarter million people could die by year's
end, the administration offered
on Wednesday to provide up to
30.000 U.S. troop* aa part of
any multinational effort to get
food delivered past feuding
d a n s in the stricken African
country.
Meanwhile, although more
than 100 Serbian flights have

, th o u ghtfu l, response.” **{d
J a c k M endelsohn, deputy
director of the private Arms
Control Association,
M endelsohn said the
R ussians, citing economic
hardships, asked for some
easing of the Draconian de*truction terms.
Both sides are not quesUonlng the general goal of the
summit accord, and yet the
deal, which seems to be In the
beat interests of the United
Slates, to not getting done,
"On this, like on many other
issue a, the adm inistration
appears to have a soft oenter,”
Mendelsohn said.
Schwetd has covered
On another front the Middle can diplomacy for The
B a it negotiators are preparing a ted Press since 1973.

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But, Nunn said, "he has a
rare and unlqt* opportunity

Clinton on high-definition
TV, go-anywhere phones
• y | | AN ■ B I I I T O N
Associated Praia Writer

ministration official who now Is
a telecommunications professor
at Tufts University.
WASHINGTON — A cellular
It's partly generational, inphone coats 1200 or more to buy duatry officials say.
and upwards of $26 a month to
"President Bush Is a 68-yearoperate. How quickly those old man who held a photo op
prices might come down will learning how to use a comdepend In part on the Clinton puter." said Thomas Wheeler.
administration.
p r e s id e n t o f th e C e llu la r
H ig h 'd e fin itio n television Telecommunications Industry
promises pictures nearly as crisp Association. "Here we have two
and d ear aa real life. Whether men In their 40a. one of whom
you'll be able to buy one this (Vice president-elect Gore) has
decade depends a great deal on three computers. They com muhow fast the Clinton admin 1stra- nlcate by e-mail,"
tlon moves.
Pressure also Is coming from
Fiber-optics. Video telephones, consumers.
Cable TV re-regulation. Should
Even at the relatively high
AT&amp;T be allowed to provide price*, cellular phone use has
local telephone service? Should spread t o 10 million subscribers
the regional Bell phone comps- sin ce 1983 w hen the first
niea offer long distance? Who cellular phone was put Into use.
should be allowed to provide according to the Industry.
Information over the phone
"No other m eans of comline*?
municationa has ever grown aa
These are Just a few of the rapidly as cellular; not land line
d o sen s of c o m m u n ic atio n s telephone, not broadcast TV, not
Issues falling Into the lap of the cable TV. not beepers, not fax
new administration.
machines," Wheeler said.
T he e x p lo s io n o f new
But It took the Federal Comtechnologies In recent year* has municationa Commission from
outpaced both the marketplace 1968 to 1963 to Ilnd space on
and the regulators. But the the airwaves to allow cellular to
Clinton- administration will be operate.
m ore focused -' th a n -U s ReNow. the FCC has been salted
pabNbatf-predecessors on how to find more apace so the many

U tu au U M W lavou jau la MgWUCT .MW

various kinds of wireless telephone systems can get Into the

market. If enough companies are
allowed to compete, the price of
c e ll u la r p h o n e s ,c o u ld be
expected to drop,
As for HDTV, testing Is under
way among four Industry groups
that have developed advanced
television system technology,
The FCC In 1004 Is expected to
chooae one of these systems as
the standard to which all com­
eras, transmitters and receivers
will be manufactured,
But the timetable could be
affected by the changing of the
guard at the White House,
Will Clinton give the telephone
companies incentives to replace
the millions of miles of copper
wire webbing the country with
high-capacity fiber-optic cable?
Or will those who support
technologies that can enhance
the abilities of copper wire win
out?
WUI the Clinton Justice Depaftment defend the sections of
the new cable television re­
regulation law being challenged
Incourt?
By and Urge. Industry and
consumer groups are optimistic,
that the Clinton administration
wf&amp; move aggressively to make
new c o m m u n Ic a t i o n s

(or othor motor vohicle)

Ad mint Iwfhidf phana nitw?KfF
Ifnhidi hunt
bssn sold in 10days, csll us and will rtnsw it frsa. Nocopychange
whilt ad it running w ept for price. Non-commercial only.

1. Ada will ba aehodulad to run for 10 daya.

?.n.d

maintain the tradttibnal U.S.
leadership in this field.

TM« la b QfBSt opportunity for you to anjoy tha aama graat raaulta aa
our rapular claaatflad ouatomara at no coat to you. Juat follow thaaa
Inatructlona.

C a ll 322-2611 Ibday!

17.90%
11.98%
7.41%
64S%
3.35%
941%
2,70%
: 8J8% ';

"It cannot be like Medicare, like Medicaid,
that every state has to perform the same
way." he said. "That's our greatest fear,
that someone would pasa another top-down
federal program that puts us In the same
straitjacket.

Bush adrift
By BARRY SONWBIB

r
i
f
&gt;
'
k

�KM

■HBh M H H h

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday. November 27, 1002

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN THB C ltC U IT COURT
O F T H Iia T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND FOR
SEM INOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
O IN IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASK N O itl-m tC A 140
Flertda Bar 7030043
CITIBANK FED ER A L
SAVINGS BANK, an aMoclaflon
ertanlMd and otlttlnp undar the
law* el the United Slate* el
America, formerly known at
CITICORP SAVINGS OF
FLORIDA, a Federal Serine*
and Loan Attoclallon,
Plaintiff,

tentet a*required may rew it In
a ludfirent or order ter the
relief em e nded In the petition.

WliinNn TweTSM^Vwllve&gt;

DATE Don November 10. IF**.
M ARVJNNE MORSE
Clerk olCIrcult Court
By 1*1 Joyce Cleckley
A t Deputy Clerk
PubUth: November I) » , 17 A
December A I ff!

DRY-147

JE F F R E Y H .SLOM AH
BISQUE ASSOCIATES a
Pterida general eartnenbip;
RALPH T.DAVY7|IIj
ANDREW H .IR D M A H
FRANK C .FO R ELLR iand
H EATH ER J. TW EED.
Ddandant*.
NOTICE O F M L B
P L E A S TA K E NOTICE mat
me foUnelnp deecrlbed real
property will be aeld at public
tale on December
t ffl. at
tt:00 A M . at the Seminole

iminole

Orlando - Winter Park

•2-2611

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

v

ts.

recorded In Plat Bodi JO, at
Pape 33. of the Public Record*
el Seminal* County, Florida;
alto known at 443 COI(berry
Street, Altamonte Sprirp*. Flor|d|,
OATKD thl» lOtti d* of No
M
E in ^ w i M
Ir»*i

U —U n to

M ARYANNS MORSE
C LB R K O F COURT
BY: JanaR . Jatew lc
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: November 30.37. tool

reterence*. Call 77773*4
LA K E M ARY, New In Nte ere*?
Looking ter quality childcare?
A ll ehltt*. allege*...... .331003
LICEN SED OAVCARE
SPECIAL! OJt/wkl No ropl*

DEV-04

G A R A G E SALE
GUIDELINES

In Sam Inala County,

aSTpereanaT

diet demanded In tbaMtman.
Doted NO*
day d Nevem-

er, m».

17m

MARYANNS MOR1E
A t Cterkal the Court
By: Nancy R. Winter
ubiteTi: Neiember 0 . V

A

2*3E53E5
n a u n s T T O TlZ
x

tya.Ntfaqil0i-447t

1 « i 1 • ••?
S M a te ad A up. U pick

A tneured. Free 0*1103-170

Mf
HD
*-■-**---------RVh/ If H
I i MMVIMpVHV

or we

em ir

s a w

and

s B M P '*

f \

♦(

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, November 27, 1992

KIT *N'CARLYLE® by Larry Wrigfet
bu y or r e n t TO OWN *
S an ford , co m p la ta ly rtnovated 3 bdrm. homo. U t OOO
Include* adfocent let. Owner
financing, lavotfart R**fty
_________ U H W

tfW I f W ' k u '
MoUC

7 t— U t t t o H I f v k t
P L I O H T A T T E N D AN Tt/CU tTO M IR IERVICE AO IN TS lor St. Palo and
Orlando aroat. Far aaplka
flan tend raawma to ikybu*
Crow Training, FO ton 1044.
Oania, FI. 31004 or fan to
3W-30FNQS _____________

n^ H tjgW anttd

R ftM N H

.EMPLOYMENT
3234171

ENJOY TH E COUNTRY AT­
MOSPHERE offered by F ill 3
bdrm. 1 bath w/famiiy rm. on
alm etl 1/3 acral Halted petto
overlook* oe k il............13,500
LAKE MARY 3 bdrm. 3 bath
w/lamlly room, control H/A,
fenced yard, garagt, walk to
golf courte. Mf.tOO Owner
financing with 111400 down.

LIVE IN COMPANION. Heme
maker to live wllh elderly
lady. Wo offer private living
quartan plot talary. Call Mr
' OOOptNofMr tOAM 133M300

"323-5774
OUIET 3 Edna. m . townhoute.
n o t Park, Adult community,
watoc/garbago Included. Call
Barb, M F . 333 3443

Rettaurant A Retail. Man
agement Jobt. S33K tla rl.
Fee, BBC Mqmrit. 444437S

U sliR | Tb Be ) A Nm r e ?
Been turned down became of
c r e d it p r o b l e m ! • even
bankruptcy? Call - 1can help!
BEIOItac., 0444301

O * iryf

frewtHI into our 3rd decade
S

3

3 and a bdrm. hornet available
In Sem inole and V o lu tla
Counllet. NO D O W N PAY­
M E N T TO Q U A L I F I E D
BUYERS! INTEREST RATE
A T 7.11% FIX EO . Gov’t re­
po t, bank f o r e c lo t u r e t .
auume no qualify morfgaget I
Low monthly. Call for detalltl

We’iihetpi

PCTMTMMIKCKD

For central Florida’* betf
grooming thopl Minimum 4
month* experience In groom­
ing thop, vet d in k , or kennel
ly noed apply._______
apply.
only

AHtfUnli Rail

MUSTSOL
3/1W, 1400 tq. ft. Xfra dean
home. New paint, paddte fan*,
p r l v . fence, a p p l. Incl.
wath/dryer. Huge workthop
w/carport. 144,000.34S43W

ONE BDRM., tomlolted at
0130 wk. plu* dopotif. Utllifl
Included. PI-4114 ar *4* 0017

rncrM mmmt/Ucmmj
SANFORDCHAM BERE x p e rie n c e d Sacratary/A u lilan t to ew ltt In
Chamber Program t. Some
knowledge of community acllv llle t required. Computer

AFFORDABLE RENTS

JM iB ntfySaji

rated, weth/dryer avail., prlv.
perking. 047*/me. MMII1
credll.CatlTedeyll

Der I B o

THIS

LegaLNollce*

Fttf Fil SUoWaoRgr/DrjOf
» Large Eat-In Kitchen*
P Sell Cleaning Oven*
a Ice Maker*
a Celling Pent

Myrtle Ave.

bdrm., 3 bath, ever 3400 tq. ft.
Patfwre with ■tabto.OHO.OOO

!t4 M ld m a h 4 ll(

N F d i » ; 'o w B \
BEAUTIFUL eMer
format dhdeg. fit

u e M B U iajK i

CUTE I M fM L Call

T«a

Aowrwaa

laatatacurtty.nsege

M JB T aM t

MAMM
JCftM II A P A IT M IN T f

Rminv RMrtsuiRtil Pri

wooer,WeMoo. COdPOAtP

lMCVK*4ot«y

q.mTftffBll.

With 1

12 month k u e

begtaeing 12/1/92

Additional1 Month FREE*
1

Bedrooms only

l/l apt.UNhNM M d.M M M
NO PETS. Cad Mala Of. R m

fit Tkq Citetryl V I krtck homt
i* i i/i acre, new paint art
carpet, Mncad yard 177400

WEEK S

�9

9

I

9

t

9

9

f

f

10B - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, November 27, 1992

141—Homes for Sale

1S3— A c r e a g e L o ts/ S a le

O'.'I II

S I 35
STENSTROM
REALTY, I N C ,

W t lilt and sell
more property than
an rune in the Greater
Sanord/lake Mary area.
• W OW I A O R E A T 1/3 Condo a l
a super p rlco . B e a u tifu lly doc
o r a te d . W a ih e r / d r y o r In
eluded A ffo rd a b le !.... S17.000.

total *5,950 each, no
money d o w n ltff. 41 monthly.
1 M 0 992-934
O S T E E N , IS A CR ESI Deluxe
3/3 d e u b la w ld a . F e n c e d ,
woodtd. Extra*I SI20.000
W .M a tte M w th U M -2 9 «
O V I E O O O B N B V A
CH U LU O T A. Beautiful vacant
lot*. From *12,900-*35,000.
Selective Rea t t y . . . ..... 3*4-4320

155— C o n d o m in iu m s

Co-Op/Sale
W IN T E R SPRIN O S - 2 bdrm. 2
b a t h , b e a u t if u l c a r p e t ,
v e r t ic a l blind *, am e nltle*
g a lo r e ! S e lle r fin a n c e d ,
*47,500 C a ll 339 4211

• C U T E O L D E R 3/1 on c lr a
larg o p ro lfy lot In old Lk.
M ary. High celling*,
hardw ood floor* O n 1/4 a cre
*59.900.
• Q U A L I T Y B U I L T O rango C ity
3/2. X f r a i Incl W a*her/dryer.
equip, kit., detached garage,
workshop. groat r m .... S7S.S00
• H A P P Y F A M I L Y Hom o 1/1
w ith fa m ily rm ., K r n . porch,
loyer. largo kit., fo rm a l dining
rm .. texture coating, alum .
* ollitt*/fa*cla. O nly.... WYSOO
•SO U TH ER N CH ARM ERt 2
*tory o ld e r homo, alm ost t
aero. Feature* beam ed co ll
Ing, fo rm a l d ining rm . french
door*, 2 fplc*.. C H A . x tra
room* 1......................1112.440/

157-Mobile
Homes/Sale

CARRIAGE COVE
P O O L -C L U B H O U S E
C H IL D R E N O K I
a 2 bdrm. patio cover (DL5S2)
*4.500
• 3 bdrm. 3 bath, tceen rm.,
(DL54])«7S00
e 14 wide, 2 bdrm. tcreen rm.,
(DL4S4I *10.000
FO U R STAR M O B IL E H O M ES
9*413*1*11
F IV E A C R E S lenced, with a
doubt* wide mobile home. 4
bdrm. 3 bath. C all tor more
Information. 144,900.121 544*

SANFORD AREA
M0 IIL E HOME GOMMUHITY
14X4* 1f*4 B aytprlrg - 3/3 »pm
plan, ce n tra l H /A , tcrean
.......................... *9.500

• S T U N H IN O Lk. M ary
P o o ls id e 4/3. W e ll k e p t .
gorgeou*ly land*caped. A ll the
x f r a * . B e l i e v e It o r n o t
f 149,000.

34X4* 19*3 Skyline/Palm Manor
1/2 tp llt plan, central H/A.
•15.000
24X44 tie s Skyline/W eedtfald
2/2 ip llt plan, central H/A.
S17.900

CALL ANYTIME

321322-

2720
2420

2S4S P a rk O r., Santord
441W . L ake M a r y i f . , L k . M a ry

Broker. 32H14&amp;'*31170]
W H Y P A Y R E T A IL ! New I99J
mobile home*l 14X70 tl50/m o
34X70, S275/mo. 1441709
19*4 14X4* S K V L I N E / O A K
SP R IN O S • 3/2 split plan,
central H /A Indude* appll
ance* and Saar* se c u rity
lytfom . Asking *12.000. W ill
negotiate. B a rb ara 44*4437

•I n Obi 3fth Ybbt*

1AO—Business
For Sale

WHAT'S NEW T f T
Plenty ln th l* 3 b d rm . IM bath
P ln o c m t hornet I Y ou 'll love
the now carpet*, vinyl, paint
In and out, central HA. C o lo '
nlal window*, and m orel I C all
now for appt. SS3.900.

BLUE R IIS 0 N BUSINESS
Ongoing se rv ic e trn a c h lt*
a v a lla b i* to r lo c a l a re a .
Listed In Entropenovr and
Venture M agailne* a t one ot
the mo*t profitable franchlte*
In the USA. Stable, recti*Ion
retlttant bu tln e tt with high
repeat customer*. Exclusive
te rrito ry . Ongoing training
and support. Soma investment
capital required. C a ll John
M ill* 1-M0-M3 9H* E xt. 2215
S A N D W IC H /D E L I • M U ST
S E L L due to divorce. W ill taka
any reasonable otfor. Turnkey

CALLIAITRDU. ESTATE

322-7411
149—Commercial
Proporty / Salt
S O U T H O R A N D V IE W A ve..
| u »t o f t S a n t o r d A v a .
C O M M E R C IA L- 1U ft. long X
l i t If. wide. *40,000.124 0944

i l l —Appliance*
/ Furnifurt

I t s — D u p le x fo r S a le

407 4M 1034. foav*m**4aoa

S A N FO R O D U P L E X
I bdrm.
• a c h , good neighborhood,
*39,900 W ill flnenoa.
C all 407 5749044

• Y O U T H BED RO O M . Sat, 2
C a p t a in s b e d s, c o m p le te
w/mattr***, plus a * draw er
Dresser. A ll tor *9.332-1742

Ill-Appliances
/ Furniture

113—T«l«vition /
Radio / Sftrto

A - fB E S T A P P L I A N C E odd*
a n d t n d » l K e n m o re g a s
dryer; upright Teeter; bar
ratrlg., a ll nlcel 33* 3245, I *
• A P P L IA N C E UNIT, Apt. »lia.
Refrigerator, ra n g . A (Ink all
In on* unit, two burnersd.
ililn le t t steel air*. 2 handle
taucet. 220V. M 5 .95-4474
• B A E V C R A D L E , dark wood.
Largo colonial dyl*. rock*
sm ooth. M U S T S E E . S5J.
O B O ........................... 121 1417

• COLOR TV, II I*, portable.
*45.222 *744________________
S T E R E O . Technic* 155 Watt.
V alu e 51200. W ill t a ll (or
535011. **4-512-9234

113—Computtn
3*4-1 M B Ram , M M B Hard
d r lu t, V O A c t b r m enlter.
super condition. G n a t fra*
program s A Fra* Instract ton
^ m 234 5 7 S ^ _ ^ _ ^ _ ^ ^

B E D . Bras* quem tlt*. ortho
mattress, new d ill In box.
Cost HOOP Sell *3C. 331-4411
B J 'S R E S A L E
B u y S e ll
Furniture A Collectible*. 3534
S. Pa rk D r - Senfed 322 7449
• BRIO H T R E D M M I Blind. 52
In. accros*. 27 In long, good
shape. 14. Firm . A lte r 4PM
223-2515 leave m otw g t.
B U N K B I D S (Ca*daln), Oveen
Bdrm . Sat dk. wood. Rattan
living room *at. 523 1571
OCOUCH - tan and navy blue,
(no flower*) large and comfy.
Loos* t Ippered cudilont. *40
125 5*52

117—Sporting Goods
K N IV IS
Custom mad* or repair.
C a ll M a tt.......................333-30*4

Ilf—Offlet Supplies
/ Equipimnt
• D E S K A C H A IR Set. Metal
desk, 301n X 40ln. tan bottom
w /w ood g raln fo rm ica lop,
m atching swivel d llc e chair A
carpet m v * t pad545 323 0949
• O E S K S W IV E L Chair, fa ir
condllkm. *11333 995*________

Iff—PtftBSuppiitt

F U T O N S • B u y Ir u m th e
whale*ala manufacturer! Fu ll
t it * futon A freme (ta la,
tounge, bad) t it * O v e rt, Etc.
_______B jM E g m S E B W ______
D A V B E D W H IT E Iron and
brat*, ortho m d tre tt, now
still In wrapper, and pop up
trundle. W et MOD. Sacrifice
*300.311*411_______________
D O U B L E B O X Spring-m att,
set* Big select Ion *45 A up.
L A R R Y 'S M A R T .......... 122-4152
F U T O N llg u ld a lia n s a la t
Fram e* from *29, mattresses,
from S59I Futon F*clary, 29*9
W. Alrpert 81,3314*91
R E F R I O E R A T O R . S I3 5 ;
Rttrigerater. S70D Ilk* new;
W A S H E R . Ilk* new *135;
COLOR T V S90.4 9 2194

• N O T IC E ) F lo rid a S tatute
17* 31 slates that e ll dog* and
ca ls told In F la . must be a l
least • weak* dd. have an
o ffic ia l h e a lth c e rtific a te ,
proper shots, and be I n * of
Infetflnel/extom d parasites.
B U N N IE S tor seta. Lop Ears,
Mod. tt. (Floppy ears) n e t
cutel *10 each
....... 337-3171
C L A S S E S a t a r i O ac. 1 fo r
beginner* and novlcal Trained
dogs a n happy degs1221-5145
F R E E OOO. Mato blk. Lab A
Rottlo.
* mo., old, g n a t
w / p e o p l t A k i d * .
E N E R O E T IC I
322 2*20
• L A B R O T T E W B IL L E R M ia
Female, (payed. F R E E TO
GOOD H O M E, feeds fenced
y a r d , lo v e s K id s I G o o d
watchdog. 320 2005__________
• L H A S A APSO ARC. * mo. old
male. V ery loveable, g n a t
w /kidt. SIM. C all a lte r SPM.
324 I M l

• tale* A Repair On a ll medals.
Pert ib l* K ars sene Heaters.
L A R R Y 'S M A R T ......... 222-4132
SOFA/Leveseat. off white, loos*
c u t h lo n t - p lllo w i e xcelle n t
condition *315........... 324 2*4*
W A S H E R V D R V E R S from SI50
•a . free 3 yr. guarantee. G E ,
Kenmore, Whirlpool.
Assured Appliance - ..... *34-1711
• W A S H E R • Whirlpool, large
capacity, heavy duty. Exc.
condition. *10034995*5_______
• W IN D O W U N IT A C , 5.000
BTU. Gen Selc, Works final
1st 5100 take III 3235559
• W O O D T A B L E . 3 4 "X 7 3 ''.
La m in a te d lop, t ld o t and
seats. F o r playrm .. study,
plngpong or 7 Seds ad|. Cost
S4M custom built. Sail tor *10
tlrm .......................... 432 7110
• W ROUOHT IRON C h a in . (11
straight back. Grape design,
needs rallnlthlng.Sl*. 373 5*47

215—Boats and
ACMSMTltS
• A IR B O A T . 10 It. Grasshopper.
1M H P. Lycom ing new mags.
2 prop*, traitor. S1.5M. C all
331-5405 or 321-7370__________
BASS BOAT, 19*4 IS If. 40HP
M ercury, trolling motor, trailor, extras, good cond. S23M.
C a ll.......................
• C O B R A PISH 'N SKI • t l . I*
It. seals a, 150 HP outboard
w /tott than M tours, many
extra*. Purchased new In 4/92.
T a k a e v e r p a y m e n ts o l
*302/mo. B41-47M. Jo*_______
d PONTOON S T P I E I T A, M '.T S
H P M arc, w/powsr lllt/trlm .

0. Call 4*7-477-1144

215-Bo«t&gt; and
AcCMMTiM
• S K A R A V *9, ISO Dancer.
Leaded, Min t condlllon.
*35,495.4»7-nl-Mtt________
• ( K E E T E R bass boat, IMl,
Mercury IIS, *1995; 17 R.
(••reran, 15 HP Evlnruda,
*1.495; M HP Evtomdt, *400;
_______ Call 323 7JS0_______
• 19 n. BOWRIDER • 145 HP
I/O, About i f hr*. Immacu­
late, w/fraltor-covtr. Meat
5ml I10.5M OBO 97*539
• 19*4 tKI/FISH Boat. M HP
Marc., w/traltor. Runt gnat,
.................... .493 7*0*
• tl FT. T-Craft - Cabin, it*
Inboard, |al drive, with
float-on traitor. Eatra 19*
short block, th g to shore
radio and depth recorder.
II.9M tlrm. 333 5*9 ______
4 m PRO 17, BastTYacker Boat
A t r a ile r . 35 H P marc,
AM/FM cats., depth finder,
Rolling mtr., 3 Deleo bat­
teries. fish tinder, all gauge*.
tm a Call 3124741 Lv. Meg.

221-Good Things
to E*t
NAVEL ORANOE*. Red Grape

fruit, U pick W* pick. Open
D ally aacapt Sunday*,
Marlweafher Farm, 34*1 Cel
ery Ave County. Rd- 4f5.
SHELLY Beans. White A
Speckled Buffer Baani; Pea*.

Jan'* Praduca-Watian*
Farm* 421-2*9*. a n d ten.
e«WEBTPtna*ppt» Oranges*
ttperbuskil.
222-4IM
222— M ue Ic r I
M r c h a n d is R

221-Cart

POOL TA B LE, regulation 45..
ball return, exc condition,
pool ttlcks bell*. many accosaortos Indued Call offer
5PM, *4M. 333-4375________
• POTTY CHAIR-f»5 *09*445
• R E A L I S T I C *•• M H Z .
V F H - U H F . A M / F M 300
C h a n n e l p ro g r« m a b l«
scanner. IIM firm. 333 *404
toave massage___________
• SHOP PINO CART - Wire wlfh
2 wheels, folds ter storage.
Like new, M 330AE79_______
• MO. membership to Lk. Mary
Gold's Gym, 1250 value, toll
tor *75OBO Tray, 407A2T40S1

MONTE CARLO. '77. auto, PS,
PB. A/C, storm. Mack w/red
trim.**** OBO 334371*
PLYMOUTH HORIZON - '*1.
run good, haator OK, new
valve cover. *4*8OOO333*907
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION a
EVERY FRIDAY 7r3* PM
DAYTONA AUTOAUCTION
Hwy.97,1

222— M l t c W a ntouE
AVON PROOUCTA Call 222*21*. Shag New l v Xmas, 19%
Dficeuwf wffhfhtsadl_______
• BASE MOBILE CB, Navaho
TRC 457, built In IWR, clock
AM USB-LSB w/Msktop Real­
istic AM-SSB amplified
Microphone. «IM. 222*179.
• a BUY OR SELL* *
TUPPERW ARE.
Elaine 211-am

CMRItTMAt -TREE FARM,
4700 W. 2Slh St.. Open tot. A
ton., 9-5PM............ 112 29*2
• CHRISTMAS TREE. 1 It.
Arfllklel, new In boo. Leek*
like reel *5,3204*9.
• ELECTRIC FLASH. Focal
M-3M New, used one*. Value
*25, will sell tor IIP 323 473*
JACUZZI, teal* 4. Maroon
marbtollka. auto timer+|9f»,
w/wood cob., Wll lake pay
menfs.tIMO. 333 93*_______
• LUOOAOE • American
Tourlitor, it In. Wu* hard
sided. Has whaalt and built-in
pull handle, key* and combi
nation lack. *753044/5
•MOVIE KRBBM 3IW by M
Inches with tfipM. *35. Call
333-597*

and SihH

9, IMS, AC.
power steering, wn/fm. 4 dr.
»l4M .» 4S*lorB I-M M .
TOYOTA T E R C E L f t auto,
AC. Pioneer tmnd system.
*7900..........................331 77*4
• VOLVO O L 34* - IfM, all
power, • cyl. diesel, sunroof,
IfeCOW Irl *2,900407 574 79*4

220— A n t lq u E / C lA S S lc

_______ Cart_______

TMI IIPMWIUTS
NOMONEYDOWN

• BUICK LESABRE CLASSIC 19*4, runs good. SHOOOBO
_______ Call 122 7d4_______
• BUICK SKYLARK - 19*4. 3
door. 300 V*. rm*. Florida
lllto. *508 407-133 904_______
• FORD FAIRLANE M* NT
'45, • c y l i n d e r , a u t o ,
looks/drives goodl *3.000 OBO
323 934*_________________
• FORD MUSTANO • 1970. 101,
•port* coupe, loafed I Original
ew nw .M JBt............ 32341*9
• I9SS CH IV Y, a reel DEAL,
Rum Deltyl Automatic. 2 Iona
blue. MM* OBO. 44* 33**
•I CO R VETTE. Matching I t.
both lopi. Red with while
cove. New pair* on 10/92.
SHOW CAR. AtMng *30.000
torleu* buyer* only. Day*
3339*0*. Eves. 3303970

HONDA CRM* dlit bike - U.
very fast, runt good, top
condition! *M* 32**575
KAWASAKI If* S SWfEELRR
S ad emdlfIon. run*
__ __________H322354*
19M HONDA OOLOWINO • runs
,»1,*M or bed offer
321-44*2

241—Racraational
VahlckE / Campars
019** TERRY M B„ StoeptT
w/ awning, excelton! condI
lton.*nj**.f*A*9-*i*l

M aker

Except tax. tag.tltto, etc.
IMS PLYMOUTH RELIANT &gt;

r. auto, air, ttoroo, power
ring. Just a redly nice
car I ONLY *147A* per month
Call Mr. Payne

CtortMt UtodClfl 222-2122
• IMl LINCOLN CONTINEN­
TAL 41K orlg. miles, good
condition. M.5*8OBO.324-2235
m i CADILLAC Fleetwood,
Ceberlol top. Immaculatel
Loadad STM* 322*1*7______
• IM* CADILLAC
VUto. Oarag* fcagl. Exc. cond
Warranty. *11,9*0.32Q3I75
•M CHRYSLER La Barm
Convert., rod. dgltal dash

m i n i ii y
( I N I (IV/HI II
ciu n n n il is '

222-Auto Parts

221-Cart

t

/&lt;

T M C I lf P A S K S T S

BALDWIN fun machine organ,
light walnut, excellent condl
lion* 140OBO 3231135
PIANO, antique fradltlenal.
Parlor style. Large Upright,
dark wood w/mfrror. *200.
Attor* PM &gt;33-15*

22f—Motorcydas

212—Mi»ctlantou&gt;

•"TOM CAT" (too topper to
flftmall truck - Oaftun ate. &gt;
tide dears, ana roar dear. axe.
condition. White. SIM&gt;49-S445

Exnpt tax, tag,tllto. ate.
1M* M1TIUBISHI • 4
auto, air, stareo. ONLY
*14941per month!
Call Mr. Payno

$ 5 9 9 5
i m m e (scour aw
A/C,AWSxW W O m b

$8995

225-Trucks/
Bum /V ans

C—ilBWUm4Cml 222-2122
* * AUTOINSURANCE**
PIP/PD$S#Dbm

BRONCO II - 't*. 4X4. V-*. A/C.
run* great I AM/FM storm
cassatta. now lira* and
brake* *440*OBO 1234341
FORD F1M X LT • '90. 4 wd. 4
cyl.. 4*K ml., new tlrm ext.
warranty, QIS400 3M-4I99
FORD PICK UP. 4 WD. 77.
Runs/Leaks greN I Recently
primed. MIM. ORQ332-WB4
• FORD X LT PICK UP • 1910,
and camper, t f 4 * OBO. W1M

Comp/CoUItton-lul cov. avail.
ECONOMY INSURANCE
*«S.HWY.I7-f&gt;.
__________ 113-7297__________
• CHEVY CORVETTE. 7*. Ttapt, loadad, good condition.
14.900
__________ M ill**__________
DATSUN 3M XX TURBO - H. I
owner, 714*0 orlg ml., silver,
T-top*. * *•■ *34M330-974*
DODOE ARIES • 93. 4 door,
auto. A/C. PSPE, Excellent!
*1475 Car Crejy,tot544l
• FORD TNUNOERBIRO, 197*.
Run* goad, to vinyl top. Nmds
tires. ONLY *790.9I-9M*
JAGUAR XJ* • '71, dark grmn
with toother Intorlor, good
condition. *4400 40-4301*05
LINCOLN TOWN CAR. 1973.
orIg. owner, capper metallic
toeffwr Inf., S3400323 5004
t il

V4L m M

$7995
im o u c K im
«GU,l4Pd*iAMtoatoB(

$ 9 ,9 9 5
1MIINCKBJCTNAVAOON
M M b ITJMH m

’•to. 407-31! 79SS

S

1991 JEEP CHEROKEE
SPOET • 4 dear, 1wheel drive
4.90* mlto*. DEMOI M G R
1974 OOOBE I TON • II If.
wmk. S14M or
........ 431-44(2
IMS ISZUIU Pick «p Truck,
Runt. Oood shape. BUM.
44P-7I17.__________________
•73 CNEVT, Hvy «uty to ton,
4M cu. In. amoll block, auto,
Hlv.mm.
GGB__
2JF

ug at tocond handcart In goad
running cendlltonl Cheap
Cash price*. Wll taka Pay­
ments! Cani
Pm* AM* SatoaiP-MM
MB MIDGET, '77, converllbto.
new altomator/toftory. mild
bady,(l4M«

$ 1 1 ,9 9 5

t e t o f M tbr ( s

IMFONOTCMPOADr.
1 M BUICK NOAOMAITIN
m m iM —i . i W M

$ 11,995
nut it '• i i u f sr.Ntiicii

629-0549

OfRTBIKES. M RM IS*, run*
oac., took* o k . Only SMB)
Ofdar TS-MS. mm exc., took*
loir Only BMB.
AM-S7M

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1 9 9 3 .5 N IS S A N 4 X 2
UST:
$10,044
DISCOUNT:
2,040

£ ^ *7 ,9 9 9
(Am t to Finance) SO% APR. 80 mo*.

NO MONEY DOWN!
T A X , T A G w tth a p p r.ero d N

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IM S 8 4 0 9X

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NOW

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ALL VEHICLES ARE RECONDITIONED AND 27 POINT SAFETY CHECKED
* 2 NISSAN STANZA
■#« Mto AT, MB, AMIPMCO*lR*r.

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�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, November 27, 1992; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>BET? |7j y

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led sherlfT-elect Robert
to the post after h.
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relentless pursuer
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died at if
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ri ~ vhiJe dl ‘d l.itc Monday and the dolph!
ly Tucsda
at Y^aquarium but the lliiih p appears cohn laemal. said th
park's veterlujrta i. Dr. Gir,*ic.iy Dossurt. Both animals, wh
•• t &lt;. \ ,_.lms oi stianding. ha:' been hi guarded condition Th
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progrr is " he said In n news release 1ue*
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BEN WATTENBEnG

erica and
y^ftituure
a Cabinet
hkh allow

* ° 8 o ,\ h a " B ir t h [
Dearth." chronicled
by this author, haa
a p p a re n tly b een

tioo

iTOifflcu in AincncB,

itotls

m Cenaua

EDITORIALS

iMlry* \

stabk over time, not counting Immigration.
rv:
^(Jyancae fertility has recently Mten from 1.6 ^

dt

io c

ately. The
iwth of 40
n sight
wwho win

for now. The reason
la a h a p p y on ei
Women and men in
theft- 90a are ttodd-

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w new one
hangee In

Immigration haa
changed too. A 1090
\
Immigration law waa — ---------— — ------- —

W Z SSitliXMi •■«•

Incumbent candidate Lon Howell Won the
Sanford run-off electlona yesterday. He will
now continue dty commission representation'
of District I for the next four yean.
As has been discussed by candidates during
the campaigning, this term will Include some
of the largest pro
the dty has had inf
recent history, w e
i the commission will
work together In a
d effort to do What la
tforallofSanfdrd
any dedstons will be required of the
commission. In one way or another, most of
the Items to be considered win Involve the
expenditures of money. Large amounts Drill
be needed to handle repairs on streets and
highways, drainage problems and other
improvements to residential as- well as

i-

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a

JACK
IF YoO B U Y e n o u »H ,

-

POUND, Va. — This small community .in
far southwestern Virginia, practically on the
Kentucky border, ia still sorting out its grief
after s Dec. 7 mining accident that killed two
of Its citlxens and six others from surround­
ing towns.

the Duany

■r CflUlp PLurWfi

rw coim tr

uSBwrsacK

BUt one thing Is surprisingly sure: If they
had their druthers, despite the inherent
danger of cool mining and Its devastation
folks would Just as soon
upon fsmUies, th
have every American
. wanting a piece of
c o i l In t h e i r
Chriatmaa Blocking
today — preferably a
ton of the stuff.
The people of this
community are in­
dependent, h ard ­
working and quite
resilient. The job la
everything to Ihem.
eo the down-suing of
manpower In the cost
industry and the na­
tional reccaaton that
haa hit them particu­
(it W M in
larly hard la the
attitude of
greatest tragedy to
done# with
them.
the ona that
W is e C o u n t y 's
brungyou.p
- unemployment rate
ia a whopping 12.5
percent, which la
simitar to the coal counties that surround It.
But the avenge for the whole state of Virginia
Is lust 5.4 percent, eo these communities
tucked tn this
‘ ' hilly
‘““to region of the state have
the worst of It.

MARRY CHOSWaS

&lt;N M X S ft M P M * .

.ontiLi

ELLEN G O O D M A N
1
,ejection
on uw;. o«
- f.t iiiffiM ii j u |

ANDERSON

Mining town pulls
together in need

You SftHP RUW IflW feS We can fieT
fWNOVMP OflNSUMeR
o f THU RecaSSW.

-cmnMNce.

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6 fiB P !«W ? Y n »L U i?

C lfR lS T M a S -

SMoppina?

.

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g,jf,nrtTiiw
i ■111r tthese cut
nJHsens
isna made
tsinjln the
#S-am best
. Hopefully,
:choice In selecting the man who will best
•aero the district and the entire dty, for the

.

That's why. when our associate Dak Van
Atta spoke with residents and community
leaders here, not one of them had a bad word
to say about coal mining. It was an atUtude of
'dance with the one that brung you." Coal
has employed these citlxens for decades, and
It significantly contributed to America's
industrial revolution, loo.
"Coal mining Is an honest, good occupa­
tion." said Jim Hurt 50. principal of the
Found High School. He says a quarter of the
county's adults make their living off the
mines, and danger la part of the dally job
description. Every miner and miner's family
knows you can't g o a m ik Into the earth and
expect tooome out every Ume.
As If to Stuatratc how Uwicapab k &lt;
tn aS waMta of life, on
of Hurt's
cabinet Is a box of dlapnaahk surgical gloves.
The school has no nurse, so Hurt does a lot of
first aid. He says the gloves are federally
mandated If he treats a student with a cut —
al
- - - - this desk k a prominent picture, cut
from a magailnc and shellacked onto a beard
by a shop student, of the three-man statue
that accompanies "The W all" at the Vietnam
Washington. Hurt was in an
* r unit in the Vietnam War.
fie knows what U'a like to have buddies who
are tike femltydk.
Bo many sons of coal country counties went
to that war, In feet, that more may have died
there than in the feat two decades In coal
mining accidents. Nevertheless, the Dec. 7
accident here waa a true tragedy. An

*
explosion
miidiU iQo feet and

am at 5:is
building
rredand

It.

like

eight
night's '"boot ow l" ahlft. Am ong^Ttdead
were Claude SturgtU. 40. and Falmer Sturgill.
45. both of Found. Together, the brothers
of seven children,
a been sad over It," noted
Rob Sturgill, a distant relative
o f the tws brothers. "You cant get flo u t of
your mind, It'sjuot ea tragic. Bo we've aet up
-r e

•w good

t o

their

t have a lot to give. But the

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W A S H IN G T O N — Seven
To a non-economist, It may
weeka after the election that aeem atrange that the committee
toppled Preaident Buah from waited until Tueaday to decide
power, an obecure panel of th e d o w n tu rn w aa o v e r,
academic cconomlata math a especially since the government
long-awaited announcement! had been rrpnrttnggrowth In the
The receaalon la over.
nation's economic output since
In fact, the receaalon wnded In the second quarter of 1991.
March 1991. eight months after
But the committee. In a news
It began In July 1990 and nearly release, had a simple expfona30 months before voters went to tkm. The crucial factor waa not

“Only by December did the
overall pattern of economic ac­
tivity appear to be* strong
enough to warrant the determi­
nation of the trough date," It
aald.
Stanford University professor
Robert Hall, chairman of the
committee, said in an interview
that the panel considered de­
claring the receaalon over as
early as September, two months
before the election, but that
political considerations were not
a factor in the delay.
" I felt very strongly ... It-waa
Important •that we do exactly
w h at w e n o rm a lly do Ir ­
respective of election timing
We did not want to speed It up or
slow It down based on any

orders down

days by putting up some cam
paign signs. Regarding Howell'i
victory. M cClanahan corn-

"Everyone here has been so
wonderuil to us.” Figueroa said.
’ ’T fiey a're ge n e ro u s and
extravagant with us here."
Parlshoners David and Shari
Norman Invited the ladles to
spend Christmas Day with their
family, but Figueroa said her
"real" Christmas will be next
day when her son from Miami
and daughter from West Palm
Beach arrive for a visit.
"It will be the best Christmas
we have had in a long, long
time." she said. "W e will all be
toghether."

"There molly Is nothing for
them to return home to." he
said. "And they are so wondcrful. We love having them
',c£e-- .
Figueroa said the landlord of
Ihe apartment where they have
been staying has made arrangementa with the governinent that he will accept her
government asalslsncc housing

For the first time In many
years, Figueroa said, she and her
mother will have decorations
and a tree for Christmas.
The Normans gave (hem a tree
and various parlshoners donated
the decorations and ornaments
they have put up.

housing,
"He toso wonderful," she said,
Figueroa said Ihe owners of
the apartment building where
they lived In Homestead has not
even begun to do the needed
repairs.

"It to like a Christmas jungle
in here," Figueroa said.
Since ihelr arrival. Figueroa
has joined St. Peter's and was

S
^ i!!2 ; T cU n T as
a1
. her
thef N
Normsus.-jictinfl

Figueroa said the members of

WThe Rev. Beverly Barge, rector
at St. Peter’s said He Is happy

disappointed.

the la d *. hav. dccldwMa

"S [
1 want to thank

diverse group ol
trict 1 than he c
and he's really |
work hard to lai
needs."

S t
paign." he commented. "People
caHie oul 'o help and I
appreciate all or ihelr efforts.
"This race was a good exampic of how a political race should
fc done." Klrchner said. "It was
overall a clean campaign, and right him just as I’ve always
everyone involved showed pro- donebefore."
fesalonal respect and courtesy."
itirr-hn^r urnuirt *,n« nunm.ni
Msyor Bettye Smith cornnlslt.

. FV" m
y*a

she sold

(he vote tabulations. He had
helped Howell during the final

rn R. Baldsuft Funeral
In charge of
Aatrid M. Bet*. 72. or II
Home.. Deltona',
Dell
nents.
Bsybcrry Branch. Casselberry, urrangcmcni
died Monday. Ded. 21. at Or.
A.FR
Undo Regional Medical Center. “ ™
'A
y ANC M
Bom Oct. 34, 1930. in Stamford.
" v U i* AV Francis. 71. o f
Avenue, Winter Park.
Conn., she moved to Central
urday,
Dec. 19. jit FlorFlorida In 1953. She waa s g w *!
homemaker and a member of St. 'd_a **'
John Evangelical Lutheran */• *
Church. Mrs. Bets was also a " g j
member of the • International
PBX/Telecommu nlest ors. Cai- drtv*?
selberry Hocdownem Club, Lu- FratK
theran Church Women and a
volunteer for Meals on Wheels.
"ja|£

Saturday, Dec. 19, at Florida
Hospital. Orlando. Born Aug. 35,
1924. In East St. Louis. W.. she
moved to Central Florida In
1979 from San Antonio. Texas.
She was a homemaker and a
Methodist.,
Survivors Include husband.

C arey H and C o x -P a rk e r
Funeral Home. Winter Park. In
charge of arrangements.
RICHARD ADAM CALHOUN
Richard Adam Calhoun^ 81. of
West Acadian Drive, Deltona,
died Monday. Dec. 31, at hto
residence. Bom Nov. 13. 1911.
In Glen Ellyn. III., he moved to
Deltona eight years ago from

daughter,

tET

• B A N K IN G : A ll banking
operations will be closed Friday,

b ^ ^ o f ' S S ^ S ^ ’S ■
^
S S T S ah ave !

•RECREATION: The Central
FloritUZoologtcsl Park will close
^ ChjIshnssDsy. The *oo to
tracitlonal dosed each year for
only Christmas Day and Easter
845^*y'
.
The rlvershlps Romance and

th e Sailonal Association of
Purchasing Managsment reported esrUer that a closelyS S cted survey of Its
s h o w e d t h a t A m e r ic a n
e u w d for the

,
.
.
,
.

believe, that
f .uUlohrtslWMi
In jcocnl I

Ing for a second chance. He s
asklngfor anelghlh
chance...The system has foiled
him. H e's Tailed h im self."
Hastlngsssld.

Survivors Include son. Roland
"Ron" G. Blake Jr... Orlando:
daughter. Ingred L. Cox. Orove la n d : step aon . Joh n.
Lauderdale Lakes: stepdaughter.
Nancy Castle. Poclftc Palisades.
CaUf.i aUt grandchildren.

dosed for the hoi
reopen on Jan. 4.

^ ? d ^ W r r«Mhn n » ^ k I A
We can no1 8 bae* ,herc

Hto defense attorney asked for
o lenient sentence, saying hto
client had turned hto life around
anti had completed hto GED
while In the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility,

"Believe me. 1 Understand,"
Eaton replied. "It’s terrible for
you. Unfortunately. It's terrible
for a lot of people.

Closing

than three years — totaled a
seasonally adjusted $133.9 »
billion, down Root s revised i
1135.9 billion a month earlier.
»
A
The revision meant that orders ;
t
.
in ucioocr juinpcu
percents *
!
rather th ai
3.9 percent j
iys. They will advance in the department's
tnitlal estimate.
1

,

and txxnmtoskmers as during
(he past two years.

Crime
drug problem and
need help." he said.
Shepherd admitted he had
even stolen from hto parents
during the times he was taking
drugs. Hto parents were at the
sentencing and Shepherd's fa­
ther asked for leniency for hto

political lactor*," he aald.
The committee had waited
until April 35, 1991 to declare
the receaalon had begun the
prevloua July. And, as It turned
out, that declaration came after
the receaalon had ended.
Selecting the ending date waa
hampered by the alow recovery
of employment and the (set that
growth twice seemed to stall,
once late In 1991 and again this
past spring.
Economists not involved with
the committee said Its delay was
understandable, especially since
it la In essence dating the
business cycle for history.
"They always wait a long :
time," aald economist David •
Beraon of the Federal National
Mortgage Association. "They .
want tcrttehiire It’s not a fblse f
start. A lot of data gets revised.
... After all, there’s nobody ,
hanging on their word."
’
Except for George Bush.

Although noting Shepherd's
,ued for cooperation with police, and
icr the saying he was impressed that he
slate’s ' Habitual Offender law, completed hto education. Eaton
noting the prior, criminal record said a stiff sentence was called
of Shepherd.
for. Even with the long sentence.
"Everything has been tried Eaton told Shepherd that when
ond nothing has deterred hto he was released from prison
criminal conduct. He’s not ask- "you come out knowing you

C1jyBal
J1®*™
La* c
ran3e
g jg
Margaret Songster Goodrich.
89. or 160 Islander Court,
Longood. died Tuesday. Dec. 33.
In Altamonte Springs. Bom Feb.
3. 1904. In Memphis, she moved
to Central Florida In 1988. She
was a home economics teacher
for Treadwell High School,
Memphis, and a member of
F o rest Lak e S e v en th -d ay
Adventist Church. Longwood.
Mrs. Goodrich was a member of

ura John, M l.
anther. WlUiam.
akae. W U-: U
Dorothy Dolly H a r r i s . o f
1890 Agate Circle. Deltona, died

have enough ot vour Ufo left that
you can do something with It."
In another court matter.
Ernest Bell. Jr., entered a plea of
guilty* Monday to felony counts
of grand theft, kidnapping, bur*
alary with a battery and robbery.
Bastings sold Bell waa bring
prosecuted as a habitual violent
offender.
Last September In Casaelberry. Bril mugged an elderly
woman and stole her car. sccording to police reports. He will
be sentenced on.March 90.

•R E F U S E COLLECTIONS:
Seminole County will not have
Its recyding collection day this
Friday. TO avoid miming two
weeks In s row. both Waste
Management o f Orlando and
industrial Waste Services cus*
tomera will have curbside collection for their customers on
Friday. Jan. 1.
Lake Mary w ill not have
garbage collecttons on Friday In
areas where Urey are normally
scheduled.

died Sunday, Dec. 30. at Fish­ Altamonte Springs. Born April 6.
1935. In New York CUy. she
erm an's Hospital, Marathon.
Barn Nov. 13. 1990. In Union. moved to Central Florida In
N.D.. he moved to Central Flor­ 1970. Sbe waa a salesperson for
t s n n K a n n f l f a m s a M fi m n i s i a i l i s i
ida in I9S4. He waa a retired
electrical engineer for Martin
Marietta and Catholic, Mr. Upp Club.
was an Air Force veteran ofthe
Survivors Include husband.
Korean War.
Donald J.: daughters, Carol
S u rv iv o rs In clu d e w ife . Alford. Orlando. Cathie, Troy.
Joanne: sons, Gregg. Orlando. Mich.: staters, Ann Eisner. Fart
Jeff. Daytona Beach: stepsons.
Etany Cuur.'Ocata. Billy &lt; W .
Ixv Uk ?. Lairy. S K 2 . " * C,,y:
Milwaukee: alatera. Adeline
Boggard, Virginia Avrlt, Rosie
Baldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Baumgartner, all of Milwaukee: Home.' Altamonte Springs. In
one grandchild.
charge af arrangements.
'Baldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral .
Home. Forest City. In charge of __ _____________________________ j
arrangements.
J 11

IB B L AND
Henry Mitchell 8r., 76, of 3131
J a c q u e lin e C a ssa n d ra
Dixie Ave.. Sanford, died Tuesirkland. 34. of 1501 Meadow day. Dec. 33. at hto residence,
ark St.. Longwood, died Sun* Bom May 6. 1916. In Savannah,
ay. Dec. 30. at Meridian Nure- * Oa.. he moved to Sanford In
ig Center. Ormond Beach. Bom
1083 from Syracuse. N X He
pill 39. 1958. In Sanford, she
waa a retired construction laboras a lifelong rcsldent-of the
er and a Baptist,
pea. She was a homemaker and
S u rv iv o rs In clu d e w ife.
Baptist.
Bernice; sons, Leroy. Henry Jr..
Survivors Include son, Edlun
Leonard.- William. Oscar. Leslie,
harlcs Sim m ons. Apopka;
all of Syracuoe, N X : daughters,
tughter*. Cressida Simmons.
Vivian Baker. Deborah, both of
anesla Sim m ons, both o f Syracuse, C arol Hollom an,
pooka: brothers. Charles.
TaltohMsec. Betty Went. Ma Mae
kittond, Leroy Orlando; staters.
Baker. Dekdrc. Diana Perkins,
sthleen a Henry. Longwood.
all of Sanford. Sarah Ealey.
Inda Janes. Oriando. Barbara,
ciewtoton: 38 grandchildren and
13 great-grandchildren.
s Funeral Home. Inc.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
Winter Park, in charge of ar­
ford. In charge of arrangements.
rangements.
AS- o f
mgwood.

Am Worid and Fled World trill
both be dosed on Friday. On
Thursday however. Pun World
will operate from 10 a.m. until 6
p.m.. and Flea World, will be
open from 9a.m. untilBp.m.

street. Longwood. died Monday.
Dec. 31. at Florida Hospital.

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• a - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, Deoember 29, 1992

Book: Best Christmas carols
Associated Press Writer
LONDON — In chooting the best of the
world's Christmas carols; the editors of
“The New Oxford Book of Carols" weeded
through bad tunes, bod texts, even bad
motives. Some they left In place.
“There are a few carols of no obvious
distinction wh|ch a n held in such universal
affection that It would have been churlish to
omit them," Hugh Keyte and Andrew
Parrott write in the introduction to the
weighty book.
They refrain from naming stinkers, al­
though declaring that “We Wish You a
Merry Christmas la “still in all too common
use.'
Parrott, who directs the Taverner Consort
musical group, began the book with Keyte
In 1985, planning to spend a couple of
months assembling about BO carols. The
grew to 200.j d ua.neaity 300 tunes,
seven years work.
S 3&amp;
"There are some wonderful texts with bad
tunes, and some wonderful tunes with bad
texts," Parrott aaki in an interview.
"A lot of texts are Impenetrable. T he 12
Days of Christmas.' the 'partridge in the
pear tree' — every otter word la corrupt 80
we don't attempt to say what It does mean,
hut we Just throw out a few suggestions; for
example, that pear tree to from^perdflx,' the
French for partridge. So. a partridge In a
partridge,"

i There are som e w on­
derful texts with bad tunes,
and some wonderful tunes
with bad texts f
•Hugh Kayta and Andrew Parrott

Christmas hymn sung in the Church of
Engtond.
"T he New Oxford Book o f Carols,"
published by Oxford University Press,
indudes three versions of "The Joys of
M ary "-E n glish and Irish version* of seven
Joys, and an American vcrsloa with 10.
Two underline Parrott's point about bad
texts. The Irish version begins: "The first
rejoice Our Lady got. it was the rejoice of
the rejofce
of her dear son, when
one; It
_
he waa bom young
The American version, collected in
Carthage, N.C. ends: ".The very next
Messing that Mary had. It was the blessing
of ten: to think that her son Jesus, could
write without a pen.”
The season's Mend of the sacred, the
sentimental and the crassly commercial to
reflected in the history of carols.

The editors said they could have produced
a abort book of variations of "The Cherry
Tree Carol," and could have filled a tot one
with settings of "While Shepherds Watched
the only
Their nodes ‘by Night,'

He drew (me) by the hand Into the dance,
and the youth began a Joyous song about
* infknt
“
-----tsi'TnDulci
the
Jesus, which runs
thus:
Jubilo,' etc," Suao wrote.
"This dance was not the kind that‘are
danced on earth, but It waa a heavenly
movement, swelling up and tolling back
again Into the wild abyss of God's hiddenA 20th-century English carol. "-Bethlehem
Down" fay Bruce Blunt and Peter Warlock
(the pen name of composer Philip Heselttne),
has a more earthy history.
"In

December 1927 We were both
hard up, and In the hopes of
being able to get suitably drunk at
Christmas conceived the Idea of coUaboraton another carol which could be
published In a daily paper," Blunt wld In a
letter reproduced m the OxfordIbook.
I
He worked out tht words on a moonlit
walk between The Plough pub in Bishop's
Sutton and The Anchor pub in Ropley. near
Winchester. Warlock added music, and the
Dally T elegraph bought It
."We had an immortal carouse on the
and decided to call ourselves
'"B lunt wrote.
the carol
cynically conceived,
&lt;
anEttghah
W arlock's haunting melody sets off
Blunt's affecting verse, which ends: "Here
he has peace, and a short while for
111naming, c m w -puom m oxen to seep nun
Bom cold, Mary for love and for lullaby
n u de, ao nf gso
by Bethlehem
i t * fa
a shepherd
‘

fold.’

Challenge: Keeping Christmas
In midst of war-tom Bosnia

Sfeii

vs^^^PMWeFl^^o
S A R A J E V O , B o sn ia *
Hercegovina — Shrapnel, bullets
and winter's chill had famed the
Slokare to mostly tom to the
kitchen. The aptnt of Christmas
tnaptmd the femlly to ventun

much of Christmas to being

Lagal Notlcaa

S h t’s making a Hat.
Ida Lspora, one of Santa's helpers at the Hlllhaven Health Cara
Canter's Ho Ho Hotline, listens to the requests of one of the
youngsters wt&gt;o called the line with Chftotmaa Hats. The hotline
can be reached by oalllng 322-1499 between 3 and 6 p.m. through
Christmas Eva. All requests are being forwarded to the North
Poia for process!r&gt;Q.

Ltgal N otlcta

p

jp^p

^

ppppppj ^

T h e fa m ily c o u ld h av e ' Christmas pageants la yoara
evacuated when the war atarted peat Than wfll.be no pageant
In April, but chose to stay.
thtoyeor.
"It's a chaltonga. tt waa danTo mate pneaots thto year,
geroua, and aeary for the everyone raided mom's sewing
chlldnn.... But thto to my city, t baatet

cantor 11, MW to Caw Me.:
WtotoCAM-K to to OrwM
Ccvrt in ana to tawlneta
■Vt^ SOMIOUai!*»*i5a

aiaintin ana maml « nv
OARCIA, MABCLVMUI&gt;Al
VASOAS, JOHN DOI aM

JAMB DOB, M M to jiB H
rm "• » 1h^tan! i*1*TJ

N te *"A *m ia : tovM tf to’ te e e It
51. T &gt;&gt;■
T b e f e 'llt o no traditional
C hristm as dinner o f roaat
a n isa tlo n , em ploye both

Mln a lot o f toaya we gat rich
through thto war In getting

,n
"

eiM.im
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g r i f t of910. It's all gravy.
Few o f thorn later*

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.

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Lagal,Notlcaa

The Motor children wen the

^

the ltvea of at least ITjOOO
people. Sarajevo, under atom by
Serb gushers. too now to m
without water, electricity or
telephones for nearly three

f'M-h

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People lined up at tha Central
Florida Raglonal Airport to
taka advantage of tha special
$19 fare to Newark on tha
recently initiated Skybus flight.
Company officials termed the
new flights an overwhelming
success. The 800 number used
to make reservations has'been
constantly busy since yester­
day. 8kybus will add a second
flight from Sanford In January.

f a
a
i I *% E f l

.....................:

E &amp; e s p i r i t o t th e
ft c a s o n i s a ll c r a m * .
l s f a i a h f s a i i iiy s a r M l s i i | se |ip B rt

2901 Country Club ^d. »3a9-t$44»32fl4000«Tbwtnfl 322-9930

Air fares going up Christmas Eve
mk a m

Currently.

PBuelnitl Witter------------------NEW YORK — Malar altttnea

.

—*

-a

- *

announcing

fore increaaee tn advanoe usually
cancel the hikes before theytaE
effect tf other atritnas fall to fo
a Im

M t l a *4 • h I I I u h i I A ftu 4 n i l w n mia

policies, wants to Install a hood that U.S. regulators would
system that would make airlines block Um deal,
more likely to lose business if
British Airways and the British
they raise prices and compett* *?Tern“ « U
oppomA to
tore don't follow.
«brtn« U.S. elrtlnea greater scThe fare hikes, announced
* ° London's Heathrow
Tuesday, anoear oart of an effort Airport, a major connecting
point for international flights.
poaslhie before the government
Trans-Atlantic fares already
n^JssaHmoredtflVniltsaUdTm « e cheap, w ith advanceparsons, editor of Beet Fares purchase New York-London
mmgmnn*, which tracks ticket a w e less than MOO round trip.
prtSaT
M aking B ritish A irw ay s a
Starting Thursday wish*, on- stronger competitor for Araerte-way. unrestricted tickets will can. United and Delta wouldn't
rise by 810 to 900. The increase P** much more pressure on
affects tickets m ost often
.
purchased by business travelers
USAir and British Air aaid they

No other Industry la pre-

H You A ir.

;
recently show they aren't

vice presidento f marketing.

Moving Into o r■■
' Around Ths Aras’
Clotting Marriott
Having A Baby

AIDS leaving countless kids motherless
Moat will be poor
or
Hispanic, living tn communities
laaat equipped to care for them,
and they w ill face aerloue
psychological, financial and
Isgil pcotMma, aald the authors,
. . ***!^
and two graoddaugb| ItiA dflaMM kp. m p
r
m Im
re
her 7-vesr-otd
y
ly way I foes It to to

nnfoHor at the City Untvcretty
7
Of new TOfmfnccucmi ftCnOul&lt;
MUnleM increased Attention
•»&lt;* wwuroes are devoted to this
vulnerable population, a social
u un»vo‘dable,("

d mvllEUbtol&gt;cr^an d
’ 2 L ,2 S r » ^
iS d

d more families ,and
Ice agencies are going
sarn to deal with E
tn today’s Journal of
eon Medical Aasodaitee that the number
American youngsters

Another study. Issued by the
United Hospital Fund, estimates
that aa many as 30,000 of those
c||1|(ircn&lt;
An additional
984)00 young adults, ages 19 to
98, will Uve In New York.
setal’a grandchildren were
lucky tn some ways. Their
mother, Armeda, and father,
Eddie, asked Betel to take
custody of the children before
the mother died.

Jrirea by Alps' will

Bstal was able to care for them

You have to learn to

plus the ailing parents.
“It was an hourly aoi
One grandchild died In 1998 at
IS months, and the glil'a mother
died the following year. Another
grandchild died this summer
two weeks short of her ninth
birthday.
Carol Levine, co-author of both
studies, said that h w n — of
AIDS, there tie growing populatlon of teen-agers whowtUaoon
be stone
They're hard to place in
foster care or adoptions because
they’re too trig and not as cute aa
babies.'' aald PhvlUs flussrr
executive director of the Herbert

Letyour Welcome Wagon mpmentative
answeryourquttfon* *boutth*Mf*a and
prmmttyou withfrm gift*.

The authors of the JAMA
study estimated that 19,500
children and adolescents who
are not infected with the AIDS
virus themselves already have
been “orphaned" by the dlseaae.
The num ber o f orphans Is
expected to rise to 49,900 by
1998 and to 894100 by the year
9000. they wrote,
The research ers defined

If You Uvt In On«OfTheeo Atbm , Fleece CbN

Sanford
Lake Mary

They
didn't consider the possible
presence of a father because
mothers with AIDS are often
single parents or have partners
who sre themselves infected

323-5262
321-6660

Casselberry
Oviedo

An accompanying editorial
Ore. Stephen W. Nicholas and
Blaine J. Abrams of Harlem
Hospital Center In New York aald
the study's cellmates are probeblylow. •

W

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(or other motorvehicle)
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TiW f

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, December 23, 1092

Clinton concentrates on filling four Cabinet posts
By RON P O U ftN IM
Associated Press Writer_________
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - With
his economic and foreign policy
teams In place, President-elect
Clinton Is focusing on filling four
remaining Cabinet seats, In­
cluding the marquee post of
attorney general.
Transition aides said Clinton
planned to appoint the first
woman to head the Justice
Department. Mentioned most
prominently was Washington
attorney Brooksley Born, al­
though at least two other women
still were believed to be In the
running Tuesday.
Clinton also must choose agri­
culture. Interior and transporta­
tion secretaries. His stall said
appointments were not expected
today, although aides did not
rule out a late change In plans.
The president-elect said he still
hoped to finish the Cabinet
selection process by Christmas.
On Tuesday. Clinton an­
nounced hts eight-m em ber
foreign policy team. Leading the
group were lawyer-diplomat
Warren Christopher and House
Armed Services Committee
Chairman Les Aspln, D-Wta., as
secretary of slate and defense,
respectively.
Christopher, 67. Is Clinton's
transition director. An experi­
enced diplomat who negotiated
the release of 52 Americans held
hostage In Iran, he was No. 2 at
the State Department during the
Carter administration.
Aspln. 54, Is a defense expert
who isn't afraid of bucking his
Democratic colleagues on arms
policy.
Most of Clinton's appointees
cut their teeth during the Cold
War. but they must now grapple
w i t h e t h n i c w a r f a r e In
Yugoslavia, anarchy and starva­
tion In Somalia, budding democ­
racy In the former Soviet sphere.
“The world Is no longer a
simple place with dear choices."
Clinton said. He spoke with
difficulty, his voice hoarse from
winter allergies.
The president-elect named his
economic team last week. Of the
remaining positions to be filled,
Chicago banker William Oalev
appeared the near-certain pick
for transportation, although
Clinton still wants to find a job
tot
for former Michigan Oov. Jim
Blanchard, a dose friend and
strong campaign supporter.
Former. Arizona Oov. Bruce
Babbitt has been the favorite for

the Interior Department, al­
though Rep. Bill Richardson,
D-N.M., figured in the specula­
tion again Tuesday. Sensitive to
criticism that his Cabinet Is not
diverse enough. Clinton might
choose Richardson, a Hispanic,
over Babbitt, aides said.
If so, Babbitt could be named
trade representative If he Is
passed over for Interior secre­
tary. aides said.
Rep. Mike Espy. D-MIss., still
figured prominently for agricul­
ture, although senior transition
aides called this pick “fluid."
New names surfaced this week.
Including Rep. pan Qllckman,

D-Kan., and Colorado Oov. Roy Albright, a veteran Democratic
Romcr.
foreign policy adviser and
Bom, the possible choice for lecturer, to serve as ambassador
attorney general, Is liberal­ to the United Nations, a post the
leaning and Is a close friend of president-elect said he would
Hillary Clinton, with whom she elevate to Cabinet-level status.
served on the American Bar His choice for CIA director was
Association's women's commit-, James Woolscy, Carter's un­
tee. Other candidates to head the dersecretary of the Navy and
Justice Department apparently President Bush's negotiator for a
Include Shirley Hufstedlcr, a conventional forces treaty In
liberal activist and former edu­ Europe.
cation secretary under President
Rounding out the team were:
Carter, and Washington federal
—Anthony Lake, a veteran
appeals court Judge Patricia foreign afTalrs specialist who
Wald.
.
once worked for Henry Kissinger
At hts news conference Tues­ and also served In the Carter
day. Clinton named Madeleine State Department, as national

to be Lake's top deputy at the
National Security Council.
Clinton and his appointees,
most of whom face Senate con­
firmation hearings, were reluc­
tant to offer any specifics when
pressed to say whaf new direc­
tions might come with next
m o n th 's c h a n g in g o f a d ­
ministrations.
Still, Clinton repeated his ob­
jections to what he said was
China's use of prison labor and
heavy international arms trad­
ing. and said the United States
could use trade with China as
leverage In urging democratic
and other reforms.

security adviser.
—Retired Adm. William J.
Crowe, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff under Presidents
Reagan and Bush and a Clinton
campaign adviser, to head the
Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board, which reviews proposed
covert operations.
—Clifton R. Wharton Jr., a
former university president and
currently the chief executive of a
New York company that controls
some $100 billion In pension
funds, to be Christopher's depu­
ty at State.
—Samuel Berger, a top Clinton
campaign and transition adviser,

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Sports
1 L 'j/VifY *• j

■ 1 1 -M M l
1
A U i.ijrO tW B ^^si

1LOCALLY
Referees needed
SA N FO R D — Tilt* Sattlntd Recreation I &gt;*•
parim cu i needs i r l r n r s lot its Youth Basketball
League All names a ie played on S aiu n lav
In ieiesied parlies aie cm nut aged lo c all Inn
Selialei al 3 3 0 5 09 7

SunRays become Cubs
O R LA N D O
l lie l int ago Cults completed
I lie pm eliase ol I lit- C l a s s AA Southern League
O rlando franchise and renam ed (lie leant
IonnerIv called the SnnUavs ihe Orlando Cubs

Magic win streak at four
O K I.A N D O — Uooklc Shatpnlle O ’Neal had 28
points. Ill rehounds and In t' blocked shots and
sparked a loin th tpi.il lei m ill that earned
Orlando t o .i 101 &lt;)M vleloi v ovet Utah
The .1.1// who lost loi onh the loin 111 lim e lit
12 road names. gut At) points trout Karl Malone
and 20 trout .It II Malone.
Scon Skill s had 17 points and Dennis St oil
si i iieil all I'I ol Ills puli Its III tile lust hall

Central Florida Classic
t MO.ANDl &gt; Kennv Svkcs seined 28 points to
lead (ira m h lliin Stale |f&gt; 3| to a 9 4 -8 3 victory
o v e i N otiheasiern in tIn* cham pionship tjaiue
I uesilay ol the C entral l-'loiIda ( lassie
A iilh o n v Hi own scored 2 1 points io lead
NorI heasiern (•! 2l.
hi the ((insolation name. Mi Neese Stale |:t 4l
de.tie.tied C entral Florida |3-.r&gt;| 77-73
M elvin .Johnson scored 17 points to lead lour
ol In i Me Neese State playels ill don hie Until es
Victor Saxton scored 2 1 points to pace I ' ( T

AROUND THE STATE
FSU buries ALR
I'A LLA H A S S FK - Four Florida Slate players
were In double linures and I I scored as the
Seininnies delealed A rkansas-I.ittie Rock 95-K4
Doun Kdwartls scored Hi points. Hob Sura la .
Unduev Dohard 12 and Sam Cassell I I as
Florida State |(&gt;-3| won Its third s iia in h l name
I'ony M artin scored If) points. I.arry Helleion
11 and Tony ( ’tilm e IO lor A-I.U 12. 11

Drost leads Southern
I.A K F I.A N D — Hill Drost scored 15 points and
nrahhed nine rebounds lo lead Florida Southern
lo a B5-59 victory over Lewis on Tuesday
Maurice Kilo led Lewis ( I -71 w illi 18 points
Lee and IU*nnle W ashinnion each contributed
12 points for Florida Southern (5-2)

AROUND THE NATION
Lighning fall
BOSTON — Brent Ashton and Ted Donato
scored second-period goals. Ill linn ihe Boston
Bruins to a 5-5 victory over the Tampa Hay
L in lttn ln n o n Tuesday ninlii
Brian Bradley had two goals. Ills 27th and
2Hih ol the season, lor the expansion Linhiuinn

USF fourth
B IR M IN G H A M . Ala. — Hennle .Jackson had 52
points and grabbed 17 rebounds to lead Nieholls
Slate lo a 94-84 victory over South Florida in
the consolation nam e ol the IJAH Invitational.
Team m ates G ren Puckcrlnn added 25 points.
Kcldrlck Porter 14 and Burl M eK nlnhl 15.
Derrick Sharp led South Florida 12-5) w ith 2-1
points and six assists, w hile .Jesse Salters
contributed lO p o in ts a iu ! I I rebounds.

W HAT’S HAPPENING
Boys’ Basketball
CENTRAL FLORIDA CLASSIC: Seventh place.
Sominole vs University. 2:30 p m.; Filth place.
Titusville vs Moore County. TN., 4 p.m.; Third
place. Hialeah-South Dade vs Largo. 5:30 p m.;
Championship, Lake Brantley vs. Gainesville-P.K
Yonge. 7 p.m.

Girls’ Basketball
OCALAFOREST LADY CAT INVITATIONAL:
Third place, Lyman vs. loser of Hancock County.
KY Ocala Forest game, 6 p.m.

Girls’ Soccer
F L A G L E R -P A L M C O A S T T O U R N A M E N T :
C h am p io n sh ip , S e m in o le vs. J a c k s o n v ille
Mandarin, 6 p m.

Sem inoles stalk title
Tribe booters
Sandcrabs
top
’Hounds
in
0T
in finals tonight
By TONY DeSORMIER

B U N N E L L — Dawn Burks scored lour goals
Tuesday nlnht to leatl the Sem inole 11lull Sclmnl
nit Is’ soccer team to a 4 1 w ill over host
Flaglcr-Paltn ('oast and into the finals ol the
F la g ln Palm ( ’oast Tournam ent
T he Seminoles (7-4 11 will play JacksonvilleM a n d a rin at (&gt; p.m .- this e v e n in n lo r the
toiiruam ent chainplonsltlp.
A lter .i scoreless llrst hull. H o iks scored three
noals In the llrst 12 m inutes ol tin* second halt.
Flaglcr-Palm Coast look advautane "I a uioiiien
tary Sem inole ilefenslve lapse to get mte goal
back befote B m ks added Iter lo tu ilt w ith live
m inutes left in iltc name
"O u r delense did .ill o utstaudllin |ob except tor
one breakdow n.” said Sem inole eoaelt S o /v
Reno "Brooke Baker. Leslie W eber. Jessica
Latin*’. -Slti'llv Hu.m. and ( ’belle lla tb a w a v n ulls
played well
" W e n**t to plav all ol the n&lt;rK lo n in D i. so it sv.is
a nood mniit "
H ath aw ay, who split lim e hetween the backbite
and m idhcld. assisted on Burks' llrst two n".ils
Shirley Pinto had the assist on Burks' third noal
Seminole, which took )•) shots w ithout seorlitn
a noal in the Inst halt, llutshed w ith 3 9 shots
while Flanler-Palm Coast attem pted live. The
T rib e also had a 5-2 ctlne in corner k i c k s
Sem inole n*&gt;alle C hristy Oliver m ade lour saves
while her Flanler-Palm Coast t ounterpart had 25

ll.I
C om p lete littin gs on P a g e 2B

_________________

LA K E M ARY — Set another place al the
table.
The rttllnn class ol Florida hlnh school nlrls'
soccer gained another m em b er Tuesday its the
Daytona Heaeh-Scabrceze Sanderalis pulled m il
a gutsy 3-1 overtim e w in over the Lym an
G reyhounds In the llnal of the Burner Klun
Classic al Lake Mary Hlnh School's Don T .
Reynolds S tadium .
Not only was 11 L ym an 's llrst loss In nearly
two years, hreaklnn a 40-gnm c w lnntnn streak.
Seabreeze Is the first noa-Sem lnole C ounty
team to w in the Burner Klnn In Its 10-year
existence. T o Ire speelfle. Ihe Sanderalis are the
llrst team other than Lym an and Lake Brantley
lo w in the Burner Klnn.
To get •'» the cham pionship nam e. Seabreeze
(11-21 defeated Tallahasscc-Llncnln (Class 4 A
s e c t i o n a l q u a l i f i e r s la s t y e a r ) . F o r t
Laudcrdalc-St. Thom as A quinas (Class 3A state
tournam ent qualifiers a year ano| and Lake
M arv.
" I don't m any teams w ho have none 4t&gt;
names without loslnn." said L ym an eoaelt G ary
B arnett, adm ittedly relieved that the streak had
com e to a halt. " A ll ath letes know that
eventually, you are nult*n ,(r lose.
"G ive credit to Seabreeze; they took the
name. W e w eren't al o u r best and they took the

L~See Girls, Page 2B

Lyman
escapes
with tie

P a trio ts ,
S e m in o le s
a ro u n d fo r
th e fin a le

From Staff Report*

By DEAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
SA N FO R D — It looks like the
lessons are sinking In.
Since taking over tlit* |nh ol boys'
head basketball eoaelt at Sem inole
Hlglt School. Boh T ra ln a lias been
trying to instill in Ills players a
sense of team w ork, hard-nosed d e­
fense. and patience on offense.
In an elim ination game of the
C en tral Florida Classic Tuesday
night at Sem inole C o m m u n ity C ol­
lege's Health and Physical Educa­
tion Center, all ol those things were
in evidence as Arrow Force One won
a 7 0-68 nall-hltcf fm m Seabreeze in
o v e rtim e to advance to tod ay's
seventh place game at Oviedo High
School
S em in o le w ill face U n iversity,
w hich upset tourney host Oviedo
44-4 I Tuesday, at 2 :3 0 p.m.
A rrow Force One was not the only
Sem inole C ounty team to poll off a

See Classic, Page 2B
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A CLASSIC
* • S E M IN O LE C O M M U N IT Y C OLLEGE
CONSOLATION BR AC K E T
U N IV E R S IT Y 44, O V IE D O 41
Oviedo M l )
Freund 0 0 0 0, Sams 1 0 0 2 , Boss 2 2 2 8. Repple
0 0 0 0. W rlg h l S A 10 16. B ellhorn 0 0 0 0. B ra ifo n 5
0 0 10. Lukens 0 0 0 0. H e n d rli I 2 4 J Totals M
11 1661

University (44)
Torres 0 0 0 0. O C a lla h a n 2 3 4 2, Newton 1 0 0 2 .
Jones 2 4 2 8. V ickers 4 4 4 12. A bbott S 4 6 IS. Bliss
0 0 00 T o ta lt 14 IS 21 44
Oviedo
|
f 12 11 — 41
U n lv e rilty
M 10 2 I t - 44
Three point he ld goals — Oviedo 2 (Boss 2);
U n ive rsity I (A bbott) Team fouls — O viedo 18.
U n lv e rilty M Fouled oul — Oviedo, B ellhorn
Technicals — none Records — Oviedo 4 6.
U n lv e rilty l 8
S E M IN O LE 26. S E A B R E E Z E 48. O T
Seminole (20)
T P e rk lm 2 0 2 4. R o b e rli 6 4 S 16. Tralha I 0 I
2. R P e rk ln i 0 0 0 0, P a rke r 2 0 0 S. F u lle r 0 0 0 0
D a n le li 10 8 I I 28. How ard 0 0 0 0. M cC a rre ll 2 0 2
4. H a ll 4 3 4 11. H ollow ay 0 0 0 0 T o ta l! 22 IS 2S 20

Saabreeie(68)

L a w ! 5 0 0 12. B rum on 2 2 S 12, Clare 1 0 0 2
Johm on 1 0 0 2. S am pion 1 0 0 3. Crowe 4 2 3 12.
Rone 1 0 0 2. Canidate 2 0 2 4 O iw a ld 1 0 0 6
S c a le i4 0 0 8 T o ta l! 224 1068
Seminole
| | (6 IJ JO 4 — 20
Seabreeie
1| 20 I f 16 1 - 48
Three point l l t l d g o a l i — Seminole 1 (P a rk e r).
Seabreeie 6 I L a w ! 2. Crowe 2. Brunson I,
S a m p io n I )
Team to u ts — S e m in o le 12.
Seabreeie 19 Fouled oul — Seabreeie. Rone
T e ch n ica l! — none Records — Seminole 3 2;
Seabreeie S S

Herald Photo by Kenjo ZabulunQi

M att Parker (No. 22, right). Andre Hall (No 44, loft) and their Seminole
teammates managed to stay alive another day in the Central Florida Classic
by rallying tor a 70-68 overtime win over Daytona Beach-Seabreeze.
at O V IE D O H IG H SCHOOL
CONSOLATION B R AC K E T
T IT U S V IL L E 4 S . W IN T E R PARK SI
T itu s v ille (AS)
Joe 2 2 9 II . Jones 4 2 2 II. R e d d e d ilf S 0 0 10.
Tagye 2 0 0 S. Denson 4 2 2 10. C abrych 4 0 2 8
Bolen SO 0 10 Totals 26 II 1565
W in te r P ark I I I )
Yang 1 0 0 3. W hile 4 0 0 9, Richardson 6 2 2 16.
M cC ullough 3 0 0 2. L a B e llm a n 1 4 4 6. Fle m ing 2
0 0 4. M alson 1 0 0 2. Denner 2 0 1 4 . Story 1 2 2 4
Totals: 21 8 9 58
T itu s v ille
14 12 l i 21 — 45
W in te r Park
13 I I I ) 14 — s i
Three point he ld goals — T ilu s v ille 2 (Jones.
Tagye I ) ; W inter P ark 5 (R ichardson 2. Yang.
W hile. M cC ullough) Team louls — T ilu s v ille 12.
W inter P ark 19 Fouled oul — none T — none
Records
N A

W IN N E R 'S B R AC K E T
P.K YONGE 20. SOUTH D ADE 44
G ainesville P.K. Yonge (20)
O u tca ll 2 0 0 14, Jenkins 2 0 0 4. Jackson 3 1 2 9 .
W ilc o i 5 12 11. B yars 3 4 6 10. Weiss 1 2 2 5. Baker
3 0 16. D ohe rly 2 0 0 4, M c G r ill 1 0 0 2 . M cD onald 2
0 04. GoldfadenO I 2 I. Totals 299 1520
H ialeah South Dade 144)
Futch 1 2 2 4. Russell 2 126. A lle n 0 0 I 0. R a iie l
2 0 2 14. B ran di 2 0 0 4. G r lllin 3 3 5 9. T e rry 2 0 2 4.
P h illip s 1 1 2 3 Totals 187 1644
G am esvilla P K. Yonge
15 14 21 1 8 - 2 0
H ialeah South Dade
8
9
f 18 — 44
T h re e p o ln l h e ld go a ls — P .K
Yonge 3
(Jackson 7. W eiss), South Dade I (R ussell) Team
lo uls — P K Yonge 70, South Dade 15 Fouled out
— none Technicals — none Records — South
Dade 8 4

MOO RE C O UNTY. TN. 44. E O C E W A TE R 4)
M oore County, Tn. (44)
M a rlin 4 I 4 II. H ard er S 46 16. Waggoner 2 0 0
4. W hitake r I 3 4 5 N orm an 1 0 0 2. McGowen 2 0 0
4 .M Fanning 10 02 Totals 16 6 16 44
Edgewater (43)
L a tim e r 1 0 0 2. H ore 6 0 0 12. Laster 11 0 I 23.
Seagram I 0 0 2. W aters 2 0 0 4 Totals 210 142
M oore County
14 9
S 14 - 44
E dgew ator
10 I I 12 10 - 43
Three point fie ld goals — M oore County 4
(M a rtin 2. H ard er 2); E dgewater I (L a tte r!
Team fouls — M oore County 10; Edgewater 14
Fouled oul — E dgew ater. W aters Technicals —
Edgew ater. W aters R ecords — M oore County 5 5.
E dgewater 8 3

L A K E B R A N T L E Y 1 7 . L A R G O 60
Lake B ran tley (221
Skelton 10 3 4 25. Tadd 1 0 0 2. Coberly 1 2 4 4.
L a ia r I I 5 5 72. C erto3 6 2 14 Totals 76 16 70 27
L a rg o (601
G ilb e rt 6 2 3 16. Redding 2 1 1 20 B rya n t 3 0 0 6.
H a rris 5 0 0 10. N ew b ill 3 0 1 6 Ryno 0 7 7 2
Totals 74 5 9 60
Lake B ran tley
12 18 14 21 — 21
Largo
12 M 20 14 — 40
Three point held goals — Lake B ra n tle y 4
(Skelton 2. C erlo 21. L a rgo 2 (R edding 5. G ilb e rt
7) Team louls — Lake B ra n tle y 10. La rgo 12
Fouled oul — Largo. G ilb e rt, B rya n t (elected)
Technicals — La rgo bench Records — Lake
B ran tley 5 7. L a rg o 6 2

LONGW OOD F ra n k Clpollu
converted a penalty kick w ith 12
m inutes to play Tuesday night to lilt
the L ym an G reyhounds tn a I - 1 tie
w it It tin * v i s i t i n g M e lb o u r n e
Bulldogs iu a high school hoys'
soccer gam e at L ym an S tadium .
M elbourne 17-6-2) had taken a 1-0
lead on Jesse G oldfarh's goal in tilt*
2 8 th m in u te o f the llrs t h alf.
Cipolla's penalty kick was set up
w hen tea m m a te M ike Sells was
ta k e n d o w n in l lie* M e lb o u rn e
penalty area.
“ It was a p re tty poor perfor­
m an ce." said Lym an eoaelt Bay
Sandidgc. "W e Just didn't play tla ­
w ny w e ’re capable. W e w eren't
e m o tio n a lly re ad y to p la y. W e
couldn't trap tin- ball, we couldn't
pass the hall . . . hopefully, we
learned a lesson from litis. We very
easily could have lost tills game.
" G iv e M elbourne c red it. T h e y
dom inated the first half. W e cam e
hack and controlled tin- second hull.
Inti they outplayed us in the first
h alf."
L ym an did outshont M elbourne
15-8 and had a 7-0 advantage In
corner kicks. G reyhound goalies
C hris Lewis and Robert Colon tiad
one save each while the M elbourne
keeper m ade six saves.
T h e G re yh o u n d Junior varsity
won its gam e. 2-0.
Now 8-0-2. the L ym an varsity will
play again M onday In a 5 p .m . gatuc
at Bishop Moore In the first round of
the Pizza Hut In vitatio n al to u rn a ­
m ent.
LAKE HOW ELL 3. DR. PHILLIPS 2
W IN T E R BARK - Kevin Yearlck
netted a tiat trick Tuesday night to
lead the Lake H owell S ilver H aw ks
to it 3-2 high school hoys' soccer
victory over the Dr. Phillips Pan­
thers.
After A lan Rowe scored on an
assist from T o m A crim cu to give Dr.
Phillips a 1-0 leusd w ith 2 5 :0 0 left in
the first half. Yearlck scored the
next three goals.
T h e first, w hich was set up by
Doug Swanson, cam e at 3 0 :1 3 of the
first half. He put Lake H ow ell ahead
to stay w ith an unassisted goal
three m inutes later. Yearlck com ­

! See Roys, Page 2B

F o u rth -q u a rte r ra lly lifts K e y s to n e o v e r L y m a n
From Staff Reports
O C A LA — Keystone Heights did It
to the L ym an Greyhounds again.

BASKETBALL
9 50 P III - ESPN, collenc. M aul Invitatio n al.
• h.mipioiistiip name Duke vs H nnh.im Vounn-

Horald Sports Editor

From Staff Reporte

name. Now we have to see how we handle tills.
I believe that w e'll show t he n m npllnn and
spunk necessary to learn from tills and he
stronner."
Kelly C h nnlrnii broke the He In favor of the
Sandcrabs, la k ln n a back-heel pass from
Andrea Freldus on an Indirect k irk just Inside
the top of the L ym an penalty area and hcatlnn
G reyhound goalie C heryl Roberts to Hie near
post seven m in u tes Into tin* first of two
m andatory 1 0 -m ln u lc o v e rtim e periods.
L is a B elttn nuvc th e S u n d c ia b s som e
h re a lh lu n room w h en she nodded hom e
Sam antha Baggett's cross at 9 2 :5 0 of the
second overtim e.
L ym an (9-1) probably would have lost t lie
game In regulation If not for a perfectly-lluted
lig h tin g m a lfu n c tio n . F re ld u s had given
Seabreeze a 1-0 lead at 4 4 :1 0 o f I fie second half
when site took a sum m ersault tliro w -ln from
C ortney Foekler and headed It past Roberts.
W hile the Greyhounds continued to carry
their share o f the play. It was apparent that 'he
tw o-tlm c Class 4A state cham pions were Just
about out of tim e even though there was 12:59
left to play w hen the tw o sets of lights on the
home side ol Reynolds Stadium suddenly went
dark.
‘
D uring the 14-nilnute delay, the G reyhounds
were able to right themselves and began to
apply Im m ense pressure on the Sandcrabs,
fin a lly b re a k in g throu g h at 7 7 :4 7 . w hen

Last year. Keystone Heights beat
L ym an In the first round ol Ihe
Ocala-Forest Lady Cat basketball
tournam ent On Tuesday. Keystone
lic lg lits 11 1-2) rallied lot a 47-45 w in
over L ym an 111-21 In ilit- sem ifinals
of the Lady Cat tournam ent.
T ra ilin g by as m any as live points
during lilt- third period. Keystone
Heights ontscored Lym an 17-11 tn
the lo u rtli quartet to pull out tlu-

victory.
L y m a n , w h ic h rebounded last
year to w in tlu- consolation bracket,
will play the loser o f Tuesday's
II a n c n c k C u u n t y ( K c n luckyFOcala-Forcst game at fi p.m.
tills evening lor third place.
C hristy Cogley scored the game's
Itrst eight points to give Keystone
H eights an 8-0 lead In the llrst
q u a rte r. Idoshiu Wcss cam e oil
bench to score L ym an 's hist points
and helped the Greyhounds close to
8-(&gt; h i the end ol the quarter
Wcss tlutslird iv ltIt three baskets
oil rebounds lit I lx- first hall lor

Lym an
S h e a ls o h a d s e v e n
reminds.
L y m a n o n ts c o r e d K e y s to n e
H eights 14-12 d u rin g the second
q u arter to forge a 2 0 -2 0 He at
halltlm e. A 12-10 third quarter sent
tlu- G reyhounds into the lln.tl pci mil
w ith a two-point advantage. 32-50.
Felicia Ktcp collected 12 points
and nine rebounds to lead the
G rc v lio u n d s tn both categories.
Kate Brown contributed I 1 points
while Latisha S m ith added IO
Cogley
JXItlltS

led all

scorers w ith

18

K EYSTO N E H E IG H TS (42)
Cogley 2 4 S I S . Teague 3 0 16. Dykes 3 0 0 2.
Caleote 1 0 0 2 Glenn 0 3 4 3 M u rp h y 1 0 0 2.
M o rlo rd 4 I I 9 Totals 198 1142
L Y M A N (43)
B row n 3 5 2 11 Wood 1 0 0 3 K iep 4 3 5 12. Sm ith
4 1 7 10. W e l l
30 0
6. C ra g e r 0 1 7 1 ,
M o m s W ebster 0 0 0 0. P orter 0 0 0 0 D ow ling 0
0 00 Rhodes00 0 0 Totals 1510 1643
Keystone Heights
Lym an

8

12 10

4 14 12

12 — 42
I I — 43

Three point fie ld goals
Keystone H eights I
(D y k e s l. Lym an 1 (K ie p Wood S m ith ) Total
louls — Keystone H eights II, Lym an M Fouled
oul — None Technicals
None Records —
Keystone Heights 11 7. Lym a n 11 2

�■w

viiljV N K U
«

*

.I
■S - Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, December 23. 1M2

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
Flrttrece —1/M.C: 31.14
SOkMRana
II.M 31.00 4.40
INatlvoOtvor
* 30 t oo
4MJttCariboo
340
O (SO) *74* * (3-All) 1740T (344) MtO.M
F (AIM) 740
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3By#Jove
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* RayTinaLaolta
030 3.40
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4.00
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(S3) 07403(34-00) 30*4*
Thirdrace —1/11D: 31.41
* AtwoodJockaon
14.00 740' 440
* Gr'tCtnnaman
040 *40
7Cr*»Moon*tructi
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Q(*4) 3*40R(*4) 1*4.4*T(44-1) MIMS
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* TrueMaM
340 040 440
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114* 340
3Oull'aRaoMtM
340
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lUuKkk
1140 340 340
7WlldRandao
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1040 340
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1340 340 340

&lt;" * * ," ,l* * ,r * * 1B
surprise vlriory Tuesday nlghl as take Brantley
convened 11 o f 12 fourth
quarter free throw attempts to
hold off favored Largo 72-80 to

17. Tumor 3430M. KIM33314X0774434
a Royal M 3-4a Ofoon 13MS. Total*: 4371
133*101.
utaa
is t3 s* i* - *o
OrtooSo
*3 34 n 37- Ml
3-PoMI goal* — Utah 30 (Sonoit |.|,
Humphrltt 1-3. Stockton 14. J.Molww St).
Orlando 3* (Scott 30, Andoroon St, Skilot
S3). FouMdout —Corbin. Tumor. Rabound*
- Utah47(K.Malono 13), Orlandoso taNoal
3*1. AMlttt - Utah31(StockMn 13). Orlando
a (Korr 7). Total Mul* - Utah 31 Orlando
34. Technical* - Broom. J-Malone. Utah
IIMoatdtMnto. KIM.A -till!.
McNItlt IT. (3-4)
Clark*-MMH Wollaco4-133-1liYakum
4-13M II. JolMnMM*. Jotmion3-133-317.
BorrontMo 34 M I. AnSoraon 1-7 *3 10.
Low)* St 33 3. TMboSOou* 33 343. Total*:
1741131377.
CBNT. FLORIDA(33)
RMIUpa 313313 Carlo* 4-1134*. Walk**
37 47 3 Oovtt 31337 3*. taiMn 311 3431.
MoMs 34 1-11, HanRM 3134 3 Foator 34
343. tterpor 1444*. TowM: 34-3*9-3771.
Hattttmo - McNoota It. 31, Cant. FMrtSa
S3. 3RoMt *oaM — MeNoon It. 7-M (Clark
1-3, Wallaca *4. Johnion 33, AnSmon 33).
Cost. FMrMo 313 (RMIIIgo 31 CarMr 17.
WaRm 31. Oovt* 31 Markka* 31). FouMS
owl — Vokum, Jwllon. Hardin*. R*
kiimSi McNom* 31. 47 (Vakwm 13). Cost.

Galnesvllle-P.K. Yonge five,
which hammered Hialeah-South
Dade. 70-44.
In other games tonight, all at
Oviedo High School. Titusville
and Moore County. Tennessee
will play for fifth place at 4 p.m.
and South Dade and Largo will
play for third place at 5:30 p.m.
• We’re starting
starling to resemble a
i i t r i « f sa
‘•We’re
*« * * « •“ !*» team." said an elated Tralna
I 3 t ' i « u i i t 7 after the game.
m is i 331*3 M7
Seminole moved the ball on
!f!i J 5 !5 !2 offense very well and always

Ibophor* 341
343-31.OrwM

CwMS.M.Y&gt;

KrmH|lo nnd (hc opcn man for

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1313 3 31 NI ill
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31 m 4 4* 137 137
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the easy basket and the defense
• forced several turnovers that led
to easy baskets.
The main beneficiary or the
Improved team concept was 6foot. 4-inch Junior forward Dcon
Daniels, who tossed In a ca­
tw -h lgh 28 points. Including
three thunderous slam dunks off
the fast break. Daniels scored 12
points. Including six of seven
(tom the free throw line. In a
20-point fourth quarter as Arrow
Force One came back from a
80-48 deficit to force overtime.

ii I! SS IS

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Mart* 3-141

BOftWy.RRs*.
OMIuMS, Hou.
Willi*. AH.

^ 7 * i* it* is*

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SOUTHFLORIDA(34)
CoMWMM*41-3 m AHUM344413. IsNor*
7-143410, aasrp31334S4 MotMTMr4-M3-1
*. OoMscy41333. RoHi 3-3444. Ru*A1434
3. J. Jockaon11341 AIMS31343. ToMM;
334013103*.
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layups In overtime to offset a
basket by Shawn Seales and
Seabreeze mlaaed three shots at
the basket In the rinal 11
seconds as Seminole held on for
their third wtn of the season
against seven defeats.
In addition to Daniels, also
scoring In double figures for
Arrow Force One were a pair of
sophomores, Eric Roberts and
sy 7-44- b . Andre Hall. Roberto tossed In 18
’MimmSit « P °inta. while Hall, a 6-foot.
8-Inch center, came off the
«. 3ti413i bench to bucket 11 points.
Seminole was able to hold on
lMsmhs for the win despite losing Matt
Parker to a foot Injury early In
the third period. Sophomore
■ h h b } ' Brad Trains, the coach’s son.
| and Junior NevlUe Fuller both
filled in admirably for Parker.
Seabreeze, now 5-5 on the
*M"M
season, was led by sophomore
n,*Mr *** Marcus Brunson, with 17 points,
and Crowe, with 12.
o T«W FRor.
In the earlier game at SCC.
Oviedo overcame a shaky start
rc M M w and took a 29-28 lead after three
Myo* HawM periods by holding University to
-----xoota only h*ro points In the third
Saartraci quarter. But 6-foot, 9-Inch Junior
smms m s Oua Abbott, who had scored 10
points inthe first half, came alive
SMMa
to aoorc five points late In the
nssMiiMs fourth period as the Cougars
* held off the Uoos. •
•
Fellow Junior Tony Vickers
I also bsd s good game for Unlveratty (now 3 4 ) with 12 points.

KoMnm 313 44 14. Room i oitMna 3&lt; M 4tr— a» ti 3»io.

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mw iWt n n i p i w

Seminole held a four-point
lead with a little over a minute to

Seniors Bandy Wright and
chrls Braxton finished In double
figures for Oviedo (4-6) with 18!
and 10points.respectively,
M Oviedo. Lake Brantley (8-2)
j umpcd to a 35-28 halftime lead.
then licld off the Packers (8-2)
with superior Tree throw shoot­
ing. The Mr. Inslde-Mr. Outside
senior duo of 6-foot, 7-Inch
Adrian Lazar and 6-foot. 1-Inch
Eric Skelton led the Patriots with
27 and 25 points, respectively.
Junior Matt Ccrto also was In
double figures with 14.
The trio of Pedro Redding (20).
Cedric Gilbert (18) and freshman
Eric Harris (10) paced the Largo
attack.
In other games at Oviedo High
School:
Titusville placed five players
In double figures and used a
21-14 fourth quarter advantage
to break a 44-44 He after three
periods to eliminate Winter Park
65-58. Pctcy Joe and Daniel
Jones (11 each) and Jason Reddccllff. Leon Denson and De­
nny Bolen (10 each) were the
Terriers In double figures.
Dwayne Richardson led .the
Wildcats with 18.
The guard duo of Andrew
Martin and Denning Harder
combined for 27 points as Moore
County came from behind to
edge Edgcwatcr. 44-43. Harder
had 18 and Martin 11 as the
Raiders Improved to 5-5 on the
season. The Eagles (8-3) suffered
their second straight loss despite
a game-high 23 points by
tournament leading scorer
Dwayne Lasler. Kevin Hose
chipped In with 12.
P.K. Yonge held South Dade to
less than 10 points In each of the
first three quarters to build a
52-26 lead after three periods.
Jay Outcalt (14). Israel Wllcdk
(11) and Micah Byars (10) paced
the offense for the Blue Wave.
Alonso Raziel led the Buccaneers
with 14 points, while leading
scorer Huey Putch was held to
only fourcountdta.

l:*V

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OdflndMzaleBHey, 17

Mo Traak 714, Lanow

LID

• RJS. JMS.*- Z3RN. MaM
MsokM. (1)
title R.«. - BUN. Orost Waalers

qulle come up with that one big shot on goal.
Suddenly, the S a ad c rab a caught (he
Orryhounds forward wHh a quick counter. While
they didn’t get a shot on goal, the Seabreeze
striker wss fouled by a Lyman defender, setting
up the Indirect kick that resulted In the
game-winning goal.
Brahmses finished with a IS-1 l edge In shots
on goal while Lyman had a huge S-l advantage In
In the tfinf pfnoe game. Katie Tullis aoored two
scored the other Patriot
tlyaaa O’Brien made flve
|uy shots to notch the
» &lt; * •

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wadneaday. Oecamber 23, 1992 - as

People
Cook of the Week

IN B R I E F
\ fln m H a i ■ ■ ■ i r a l l j u i A

a m Ia m M u a a
*int vumonainm on u iiu
v n opens

The Maatera Oardenera Volunteer* of Seminole County
Cooperative Extenalon Service designed and inatalled a Vine
Demonatratlon Oarden to assist the Urban Horticulturist and
Seminole County reatdento in choosing vines to cover chain
link fences.
The Vine Demonstration Garden can be viewed daily at the
Agriculture Center, 290 W. County Home Road, Sanford from 8
a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Atroblcs offered
The City of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m,
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Cost Is $3 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, board certified with over 10 years
experience,
Call 330-8667 for more details.

Nar-Anon meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m. at West Lake
Hospital, 989 West State Road 434, Longwood. Nar-Anon Is a
support group open to families and friends of addicts. Dally
living with an addict Is more turmoil than you can handle by
youraetf. Join for support In coping with your addict: gain
serenity to make decisions and put your life back In focus. Call
260-1900 for more Information.
—

Omni Toastmasters gather
The Omni Toastmasters Club will gather at 3:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the Old Lake Mary City Hall. 198 Country Club
Road. Lake Mary.
Call Sam Ryan at671-2698 for more Information.

Al-Anon group gathers
Serenity Won. an Al-Anon group for friends and family of
alcoholics, will meet each Monday. Tuesday and Thursday
night at 8 p.im. at the 8aham Club, 2987 S. Sanford Ave.,
Sanford. Call IFlora at 349-9976 for mote Information.

Her hobby is husband, children and entertaining
m j__........

with the greatest of ease. She
recalled her most memorable
event in which a choreographer
from the famous Bolshoi Ballet
stayed with the family for four
days. "It was a lot of fUn. He
could speak very little. English
and we couldn't speak Russian,
but somehow we got along great.
The going-away party we put
together was Just wonderful as
over 100 people came to wish
the Russian visitors a happy
return to their homeland."
One of the Lytle's favorite
recipes Is the Chicken Bog reci­
pe. Brenda claims. "This recipe
was prepared on the South
Carolina tobacco farms. I re­
member many times enjoying
my Daddy's special dish. It
always tasted better when he
made It. U was especlaly de­
licious when he cooked this over

Herald Correspondent

LAKE MARY — Her meals are
as great as her hospitality.
Brenda Lytle, this week's Cook
of the Week, mixed up a batch of
hot tuna flah sandwiches and
Charlie, her husband, and I
munched away on the delightful
snack as we talked. Needless to
say the sandwiches kept coming
and before we finished talking
over a half a loaf of bread, six
huge chocolate chip cookies and
a half-gallon Jug of Hawaiian
punch were gone.
Brenda admits, "My biggest
hobby la my husband and my
children. 1 have spent many
hours driving the kids to and
from school and to the many
activities they participate In. The
remainder or the time 1 usually
spend helping at the dance
school, shopping or fixing all the
meals for this hungry bunch."
Brenda and Charlie are the
parents of two children. Kaylle,
19, Is a sophomore at Lake Mary
High School. She Is a Junior
varsity cheerleader and a very
active participant tn many of her
school's activities. Kaylle la also
an excellent dancer and singer.
She Is attempting to combine
her singing, dancing and model­
ing lessons Into a successful
career.
"Chas" as everyone knows
him, 12. has his mind set on
playing baseball. He la a lef-

□

tyBri

• r a n * Lytle baglna making Chiektn Bog.
thander and therefore spends
most of his playing time pitching
or at first base. He Is a student at
Greenwood Lakes Middle School.
One of the first to greet you as
you step Into the Lytle home Is
"Amos Moses." This tough look­
ing, 7-year-old English bulldog
waddles over to pick up his
10-pound bone and then greets
you with the roughest growl

heard In 20 states. After you
look him tn the eye you can rest
assured that your life Is not In
danger and you have met a
friend for life. Amos also doubles
as the food' tester when no one
else Is available. He has never
found anything disagreeable to
his appetite.
Brenda Is noted for her ability
to host many events at her home

Holiday
-Al/lfiSfl

Homemade goodies make welcome gifts
A homemade edible gift Is
often the moot appreciated. We
all have found memories of
holidays past when the house
w as filled with w onderful
aromas of baking am
Most of us still favor the home­
made goodies that come from
special friends or family membera^WIth your microwave oven,
you can quickly make an
assortment of "homemade" gifts
th at Just m ig h t b e c o m e
Think
of unusual
containers
i
J

•w

for these food treats, then the
packaging Is easy too.
Give the chocolate lovers on
your list the fixings for an old
tundae. Use leftover
or Jelly Jars for the fudge
add a Jar of maraschino
cherries, a bag of chopped nuts,
maybe even an old fashioned
dish or two..all In a
IV* cups sugar
1 can (12 os.1evaporated milk
2 Tbap. light corn syrup

MIDGE
MYCOFF

2 Tbap. butter or margarine
2 squares (1 os. each) un-

2 tap. vanilla
Combine sugar, evaporated
milk, com syrup and butter tn a
2-quart glass batter bowl.
Microwave on 100 percent
power, uncovered 6-7 minutes or
until mixture bolls hard, stirring
o n c e , t h e n , c o n t in u e to
m icrowave on 100 percent
power, uncovered 7-9 minutes or
until 230* Is reached on a
microwave candy thermometer.
Mixture will become sauce-llke.
Stir In chocolate until melted.
Stir In vanilla. Coed slightly.
Four Into desired Jars. Cover
tightly and refrigerate. To use,
microwave sauce In Jar (remove
lid) 49-60 seconds or until
heated. Return any leftover
sauce to refrigerator. Makes abut
2 cups.
Combine a drink mix with
coffee mugs and a miniature
bottle of a favorite liqueur.

'

teaspoonful of mixture Into balls.
If desired, roll In powdered
sugar, finely chopped nuts etc.
Place on baking sheet. Re­
frigerate until set. Place each
truffle In a miniature paper liner.
About 90 truffles.
•If omitting liqueur, add 1 tap.
favorite extract
2 cups sugar
2 cups non-fat dry milk
1cup unsweetened cocoa
V* cup Instant coffee granules*
1 vanilla bean
Whole almonds
Combine sugar, dry milk,
cocoa and coffee granules; mix
well. Spoon into Jan or small
xlp-lock bags. Add a piece of
vanilla bean and 1 almond to
□ •a

M a y the wav
of Curistmas light up
yoar life.
i #

Thank you to our
wonderful patrons.
Fmmi
Mary Bridget
Maijorit Cariton
John D. Carlton
i WAUH

W f f r iqiHw

A U fl Bit of Everything
2863a SanfordAva. ' 3266830
301 E. lit &amp;
323-7900
1301 ParkAvt.
321-4396

Love, Faith,
Peace, Harmony

T ru ffle a are w o n d erfu l,
melt-ln-your-moqth candies
which are usually expensive.
They are not difficult to make
(but don't tell) and make an
Impressive gift.
FANTASTIC C H O C O L A T E
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate
pieces
V* cup butter
1 .3 % - p .favorite liqueur*
Powdered sugar, chocolate
shot; nonpareils or chopped nuts
Combine chocolate pieces and
butter In 4-cup glass measure.
M icrowave on 100 percent
power, uncovered IV*-2 minutes
or until softened, stirring twice.
8ttr until smooth, beat in egg
until smooth. Microwave on 60
percent power, uncovered. 2V*-3
minutes or until thickened IIlk*
stirring once. Blend in
Refrigerate until chilled,
several times. Form

M iT O ao-noo

wm

£et's TCay
2690ORLANDO AVB. • SANFORD
US. 17-926c27* Ave.
(Behind Fopaytkt amt to HRS)

MTVRACT

MO

Opm7M0MsaWe*
Doors Open 4£0 PAi
Wtrm-up Garnet 5:65 • Regular Games 7.-00

V’ '

CtoM ^cJuisSiuu C t t '

andChristmasfty
K M m n n m n on cA L L

(407 ) 322-2336

M f &gt;

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- Sanford Hsrsld. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday, December 23. 1992

Grandma’s Christmas wish
precious gift of time
___________ iA fklthftil
reader for more than 30 yeara —
Who requested anonymity —
wrote the following!
DEAR ABBYi For Christmas. I
don't want another cryata* hud
vase, t have four under my
kitchen sink, and nobody brings
me flowers anyway, t don’t want
a sausage and cheese tray — too
much cholesterol for this old
lady. 1don’t want another music
box to And a place for. I have too
many now. 1 don’t want a silk
nightgown, perfumed soap, a
fancy bed jacket, dusting powder
or a bird feeder.
What do I want? Ask me) I’m
not shy. I have told you already
what 1really want for Christmas,
but I never got It. Maybe this
time I will.
I want you to give me a few
hours. Take me and my cum­
bersome wheelchair to the mall;
l‘d lo v e to see the lights and hear
the music. 1would also like to be
driven around town so I can see
the Christmas decorations —
then maybe slop for a hot cocoa.
I would like a book of postage
stamps, a writing tablet with
lines and some plain envelopes. I
would also appreciate a decent
ballpoint pen that works, and
some telephone coupons so 1can
make a few long-distance calls to
people 1 will probably never aee
again.
1 would really appreciate a
visit from you and other family

■

ADVICE

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

members — especially my
grandchildren who call and aay.
"Hi, Qrandma. How are you? I
love you . Gotta go. Sec you
later. Byet”
1 would tike someone to offer
to pay my heating bill for one
month. (With five sons, six
daughters and 42 grandchildren,
that shouldn’t be so hard to do.)
And I sure wish someone would
coroe over here and test my
smoke alarm,
I really do love all of you;
otherwise, why would I feel free
to tell you what is on my mind?
OBANDM A
Tt la It OK to keep
ring after the
engagement has been broken?
My boyfriend wants the ring
back, and 1 feel that It was a gut
that la mine to keep. I need an
answer fast because he Is fum­
ing.
D E A R D10ENOAOED; An
engagement ta more than' a
’’gift’’ It slgnfles that a

proposal of marriage has been
accepted.
If there has been a change of
heart — or mind — the ring
should be returned. With few
exceptions, If the engagement
has been broken by the woman,
she willingly returns the ring.

CLASSIFIED ADS

n o fie rs p

FICTITIOUSNAMI
Notice I* hereby given Met I
ameii|N mbualnoo* at P.O.
M « ill, tenfwd. lemlnele
County, Florida, under the
Fictitious Name at IMITH'S
TRACTORMRVICC, endthat I

Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Perk
831-9093

POLICY: WAIVIR POLICY.
Thli yetIcy give* the School
Board the authority to waive
any yetIcy or provision at any
poMcyomapt totheaxlentthata
prevision at any policy It re­
quired by law or rale at the
NOWACCErTNQ

INTMRCIRCUITCOURT

If the gentleman breaks the
engagement, he may be so
relieved — or guilt ridden — he
may offer to let the woman keep
the ring as a consolation price.
(If It’s under a half-carat.)
In most cases of a "disen­
gagement,” the woman willingly*
surrenders the engagement ring
— and the gentleman happily
accepts It.

JIANNI MORRIS,
CHAIRMAN
SCHOOLBOAROOF
SEMINOLECOUNTY
Publlih: Decembern, tm
oizua

DEAR HEADHREt For folks
who pFefer brevity; more short
poems:
Me?
Wheel
and...
Hired
Tired
Fired!
and...
Candy’s dandy,
But llquor’a quicker.
The fust two are by Ogden
Nash; the last one la Dorothy
Parfcer'a.

oervm neckd

AO CARRIERS, a wall
etlabllthed and growing
central Florida bated com­
panyotter*you:
a Semi Annual Pay Increetet
• StopONPay
• UnloadingPay
• VacationPay
• SalelyBonut
• SpoutaRidingProgram
• AvoragoTripS7Oayt
• LateModel Conventional
Tractor*
It you have 1 yeart tractor
Iraller, OTR andmewand Ico
experiencepiw agooddriving
record, call:

HWYIt-ft, SANFORD

CONFIDENTIA L TO YOU*

28— Lott A Found

Please be a "deer” and give your
newspaper delivery person and
your mall canter a couple of
bucks for the holidays.

Dental RacaptieftM

M icrow ave
munchle? Make plenty. It will go
each package. Seal tightly.
To use: Heat mugs of water by
microwaving each mug 2-2V4
minutes. Stir In 2 rounded
tablespoons of cocoa mix (dis­
card vanilla baan and atanond).
•Coffee gran ules can be
omitted. IT desired, stir In 1
tablespoon fkvortta liqueur after
heating! top w ith whipped
cream.
\yho doesn’t like to receive a

ei

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m

an open fire In a huge round iron
pot. The sausage makes the
difference, but we didn’t always
add it The farm workers loved
this and begged my dad to make
ft often.”

BA0T HOLIDAY PUNCH

■

m

' j&amp; p S S

m

2 large cans Hawaiian Punch
1 large can froaen orange
concentrate
3 cups pineapple Juice
3cupsgtngerxie
Mix alt together except
gtngerale. Add gtaferale Just
before serving. You can add

gradients reserving VS of cheese
for topping. Bake at 328* In a
medium cEsacmlr dish for 30
minutes covered. Then place the
remainder of cheese on top and
bake uncovered for 18 minutes.
P A B lW I C W C H I H O O
r mefflUm slse'fryer. cut up
(2V4 to 3 pounds)
7 cups water (enough to cover
chicken)
Boll until tender (30 to 48
minutes)
Add salt and pepper to taste
Add 1 tap. yellow food coloring
2 hardboiled eggs, chopped

n sssA stss
1V4cup long grain rice
2 10 oc.
Old El Paso
Bring to a rolling boll after
sifted Beans
adding rice, turn down to aim18 os. carton sour cream
roer and let cook for 20 to 28
Vi envsloos Unban &gt; oub Mix
minutes.
i
For a real treat, add 1 length of
Vi Bell pepper mnd^dSopped. smoked sausage cut Into small

im.

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iaSm

IX— Special Notices

Combine
batter bowl; mix well.
Microwave on 100 percent
power, uncovered, 4-4Vi minutes
or until mixture bolls hard,
stirring once. Continue to
microwave 7*8 minutes or until
200*. Stir In vanilla. Slowly pour
hot syrup over popped corn and
nuts. Mix lightly to coat. Cool.
Break Into pieces. Store In
airtight containers.

CHILDCARE Cantar. Exp A
Earlv childhood Ed. A MUST.
Coll donee:.......... m tm
RASV WORKI EXCELLENT
FoyI Aaaombio product* at
homo. Coll Toll Fro#
1080407110*Ext. 7W

cu*tomrlm«.W.S«0MI7aU

ELECTRICIAN
Lie. Roaldantial Journeymen
Elacticlan* netd only apply.
SontordElectric..... m-mi

Cook_ .■. -*"v

114 quarts popped com.
V4cup walnut pieces
V4cup whole natural almonds
1V4cupa sugar
1 cup butter or margarine
V4cup light com syrup
Vttsp. salt
2 tap. vanilla
Spread popped com, walnuts
and almonds on cookie sheet.
Set aside.

Eipulxncxj,
NSvidual. with strong denial
background, for tixnprahonsiv* surgical and reconstructing practice.
Schaduallng, Insurance, fi­
nancials. andgallant ratalIan*
a must. Computar a plus.
Salary and banaflts commonaural* with aiparianca.

nd Vi
i m ix
■H in.

1 pkg. yellow cake mix
^ 2 jy g s (or whatever cake mix

Exp. Cooks
Checrieeder-Tjpe
Semen

1 can cruahed pineapple
(heavy syrup)
2 cupssugar
2Tbap. milk
Bake cake layers according to
directions on package. Put can of
pineapple Into bowl. Add 3 cups
augar. Stir well. Add to layers,
reserving Vi cup Juice and a
small amount of pineapple.

Apply InParson: CreiyWmg*.
mat French.» IPS

Exp. Electronic Tech
Or Rm AA|CiiIm ID&gt;.’
*
Highly motivated Tadwilrtao

IPtOYMENT

Start with Vi box powdered
augar, adding more augar as
needed. Add V4 stick butter or
margarine (melted). Add Vi cup
remaining Juice and pineapple to
augar mixture, stirring until
right consistency to spread on
ante. (If mixture Is too thick, add
a little of the 2 Iraapoorw of
milk.) Spread on top and aktaa of
cake.
H a t* Mom always made this
cake around the holidays or
sometimes for our birthdays.
During the holidays she would
make 10 or 12 different kinds of

323-5171

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g)to)

1Vi cups water
1 box 10X Powdered sugar
Vi stick butter or margarine

i sssi flntfftEO

bnN but will Ireln.
7t7N.HwvU*n*nm
CHMM7II

ant reconstructive practice.

Strong general dental and
surgical background a mutl.
AvailableJan. 4. Salary ant
taparlanct. H H M I ar

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IF*

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C V R I V

V V T S W .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ’TV*
N * * F - &gt; * ‘ N r* * * * * * *

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, December 23, 1992 - SB
K I T ’ N ’ C A R L Y I . E ® b y L e r r y W r ig h t

71-H ttp Want*

Ml—Homes forStle

145— Puptex for Stte

AllMUDAHl 1 •|( |M1
V1S iHt PRiil»'t W •

G o v 't F o r e d o t u r e t , Re
p o i / A n u m e No Q u a lity
Hom e*! Owner financing
Seminole. Orange. Volutla.

w ath dryer. Quiet O ff Lh
M ary ilv d . 173 wk. 3363744

SANFORD, raaeeate le a ta ri
eepeaea*. M /F . Lg. M rm .
w /p rlv a te bath Incl. TV,
phene, full hauee prlv. 170/wk
phn 1/3 ufil. and eecurtty.
________ Calf 311A r il________

In The Country I 3/7 brick home
on 1/1 acre, new paint and
carpel. Itnced yard 177.300

0 * 1

uiVvePt

Lh. Mary cu*tom bull! 1/7, 3 car
garage. Llv. din. lam. rm t.
Fireplace, tec. tytlem . *13.300
Lh. Mary renovated like new
3/1. oarage, fenced yd. S3MOO'

t) m by Nf A Me
SANFORD • I room efficiency
plue private bath. Complete
privacy. S7S per week plot
- t i l t tecurlty Include* utltlllee.
Call 333 nee

|

SM64M-M64I4S
4* FY. SBMI TBAILEB FOR
STO RARI. Aluminum tldet.
waad hear, water-tight. Will

.
„
/ . ‘f
•‘
• &gt;' M

• Refhar.SIJBinnaM

m-AntlsuR/Clauic
Core

water, free ea«. Call H H V I

T O n g ln

the
New Year

• FO O D F R S C I I I O R p lu t
kltnPtr, OE, like new, with
Bata. Cat! 1137, tall ter sto
OBO Call liA M S P M . 3363040
J A C U Z II. t e e f l 4. Meroon
marbWIke. auto timoM-lato,
w/wead cab.ttOM. OBO lake
payment*/ceth. 737 7*70

:
:j
KIRBY VACUUM C L B A N IR •
'1
with eftechment*. carpel and
u p h eld *ry thempeeer and :. s o
fleer pahthar, exc. condlllen.
1773 Call *464IM
■ NORSLCO man'* rechargea­
1
ble thaver, triple bead, cord
-|
or cordtou. Pep euf trimmer. .
SM....... .........................3461417
« M . Vj
R N IB M IM .000 BTU furnace,
natural g a t or L F . Oeed 1 . " J
candltlen. 1711744733
• i j * .£ |
• T V TRAY S IT with holder.
Like new. 140X313103
U N ID IN TR A N S P O N TA B L I
CRLLULAR CAR PHONE,
S IIS OBO *64 M 3 S7S4 or •»a N •f*!
I-S7MS3S
l
VACUUM C L B A N IR . Rainbow, w
iv* year* old. w/ attachment* i !*• i r |

Santera le u dun *1.000 down
e P ln ecm l renovated, carpel,
appliance*, fenced yd Mt.fOO
• Renevaled like new 1/1, (pic.,
appl.. new paint tlt.SOO
# Peel Hemet In cul de *ac. 3/7.
renovated. Garege. U0.000
•1 /3 an I * acre, into tq. It, fplc.
appl.. dead end tlreef 1 50.000

• 1 A 1 Bdrm. Townhomet
• Sparkling Pool
• CiclllngClubhout*
•L a rg e Eat-In Rlfchent
■ Sell Cleaning Oven*
• W ethert/Dryer* Available

“"'i'
r .ug

Ml—MlBCtllRffOUS

SMO tecurlty, 331 &lt;711

central H /A . wather/dryer
hook upt. SMS/mo plut tecwrl
ty. Hall Realty, 3331774

• t / t PlaerM ge Club, pool,
tonnlt c t . all appl*.. wath
dryer. S333 mo. S300 tec.
• SANFORD, t / l duplee. with
•arage. CHA. Ig. rm t., elra
ttorage. seeomo. t SIM tec
• S A N F O R D , 1 /1 D u p le e
w/Oarage, tern, patio. CHA.
all aaptt sue mo. som tec.
• D S B A R Y , l / i w /c a rp o rt.
workthop. tern, parch. CHA,
Ig. yd.. S4M mo. SMI lac.
• LK. MARY, t / l . w/carport,
ouI t id* t lor age. comer lot.
New paint A carpel. Clean.
S47Sme. MODtec.
• M A Y F A IR V IL L A S . 1/1.
P rlv a le l dbl. garage, a ll
a p p le ..o u lt ld e p a llo
w/pirlvacy, Ig. rm t. S37* mo.
1300 Sec

Uc. Reel Etlato Broker
MJ0 Sanford A ve.

■*«
-n

^
"• * .0
• BUICK LISABRK CLASSIC •
1*44. runt good. 11100060
. Sr
________ Cell 333 7414________
'
• BUICK SKYLABK • 1*44, 3 ' ’ ' ' f g
dear, 3*4 V 4 , rum. Florida
title. U W 467-3337064

321-0759.............. 321-2
BUY OR RSNT TO OWN
S a n lo rd . c o m p le te ly r e ­
novated 1 bdrm. home. 134.000
Include* *d|*cent lol. Owner
financing. Invetten Realty
m -e e x

3 and 4 bdrm. home* available
In Sem inole and V o lu tla
Countlet. NO OOWNPAY
M E N T TO Q U A L I F I E D
BUVERSI INTEREST RATE
AT 7.13% F IX E D . Gov't re
p o t, b an k f o r o c lo t u r e t .
attum * no quality mortgage*I
Low monthly. Call lor detalltl

land MaRsfkM, 323-7271
AA Comet, Inc., 333-IH4
ir yt

^ e v a

Q a id e i^

NSW LISTINO, Spad eeel * / H r
w /fa m lly rm . A g arage.
134,100. Vewbtre On* 77614*4.

OK.S3is/ma.ewseei

1606 W. 25Pi 8t, Sanford
Hour*: Mon. • W. 630 • 830 • Sat 10*6

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105— DuplexT rip lex / H u t

Ciurtry Like Apts.
Cheek U K
✓ N e w ly rem odeled apta.
✓ O n e a n d tw o bedroom
f4 f&lt;l 1 a - .

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✓ A sk about our 1
bed room S p ecials

security ty tle m , full Nil.

1

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✓ 7 o r 12 m onth leases
✓ C lo s e to m qfor hw ys.
a n d th orough fares
2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

fr* jta*| •H T t t a ] MI-SMS

A n d O u r S p e c ia l O ffe r
Will H a v e You Laughlnc
A ll The W a y To The Batik
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•
1 aotaMta.SgB.fi
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• B U V IR S ARS The Beet for
thlt 1 bdrm. on comer lot.
Seller* w/pay 17400 toward
loan C otltl CHA, K m . porch,
new c a rp e l, p a ln tl Only
• H I V LOOK! A 1/1 it Spill plan
w /central a lr/h e a ll Equip,
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Garage- Greenbell I .....*41.000.

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• NEW ER S /l Neat* w /tp lll
plan, vaulted calllngt, eal In
• II., wood deck, treat, large
room*! Call now REDUCED
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ta d truck. SOS. M4A3I1

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�Santord Hf t d. 8anford, Florida - Wsdntsdty, Dscwnbsr 23. 1992

Reader thinks vertigo,
menopause are related

I'M STUMPED ON WHAT
TO GET MV WIFE FOE
HER BIRTH PAY
^

WOMEN LIKE

OOOP IPEA/,
OET ME ONE/

PERSONAL E IR E

WITH A LITTLE
THOUGHT PUT

[ WOULOHT, YOUNfrUPf..
KMEMEK'YOUKNM

WHO li HATCHING!

/I JUST REMEM6ERED.N

' a r e n 't w e s u p p o s e d '
TO LEAVE 50METHIN6
.UNDER THE CHRISTMAS
V TR EE FOR SANTA
C LA U S ?

MOW A B O U T
TMI5 F R O Z E N
BROCCOLI?

J

V

BILL aiW TO fJ
RETURNED HIS
^

/

H t 5 A IP T H E Y C O M l

{ ^ W U N E M R O i ’M E W r

RESUME

AHYM»Y CAN fUT OH A »MM&gt; '***'? &amp;
AAP 60 ’HO-HO-HO".... x ^
£
U T S * * YOUNAMf
d P d sc &amp; s p
•Q ALL YOUf KiHDttt. o x P - - i / r

DEAR DR. QOTT: Can there
be a connection between meno­
pause and severe vertigo at­
tacks? I've had two to four such
attacks yearly for the last four
years. They begin with severe
dizziness, followed by eight to 12
hours of vomiting that require
my staying In bed for several
days to recuperate. Two relatives
h a v e s u f f e r e d the sam e
symptoms and have been
treated with Compazine. Once
menopause symptoms were
gone, the attacks disappeared.
DEAR READER; I don't know
whether vertigo and menopause
are related In some women; It's
an Intriguing hypothesis.
The trouble Is that vertigo Is
common and menopause Is uni­
versal. Therefore, you'd expect
the two conditions to co-cxlst In
many Instances.
Vertigo, with Its attendant
violent vomiting, Is usually due
to a disturbance In the Inner ear,
where the organs of balance lie.
Most attacks of vertigo last only
a few hours or days. Although
Compazine, an anti-nausea
drug, may help patients with
vertigo. I've had more luck with
the prescription drug Antlvert.
DEAR DR. QOTT: I recently
underwent surgery for bleeding
ulcers. During the procedure,
my spleen was Injured and had
to be removed. What will happen
to me without a spleen?
DEAR READER: The normal
spleen, a spongy organ In the
upper left abdomen, acts as a
filter to remove old, worn out
blood cells and bacteria from the
bloodstream. You won't miss
your spleen; It's not a vital organ
and the blood-cell filtering Is not
crucial to health.
On the other hand, loss of the
spleen as a bacterial filter does
put you at greater risk for
certain Infections, notably those
spread through the bloodstream.
Hence, your doctor will probably
supply you with liberal quan­
tities of antibiotics If you become
111 with a bacterial Infection,
such as pneumonia or a strep

MMCINI
PETER
QOTT.M.D.

throat.
•
Because the spleen Is a rela­
tively fragile organ, much like a
very over-ripe melon. It Is easily

.1

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f Phillip A M er
Normally, when you arc the
declarer, you try to keep your
cards "hidden" from the defend­
ers. You don't want them to be
able to "read" your hand. But
there are times when you want a
defender to be aware that you
hold a particular card.
On today’s deal. South waa
Bobby Slavenburg. a Dutchman
who won the World Open Pairs
title In 1966. He was a very
Imaginative player.
It Isn't clear why Slavenburg
opened one club rather than one
diamond. Over West's take-out
double. North made a preeruptive three-dub raise. Souths
bid of three no-trump, though
debatable, was predictable.

queen was a singleton: an a
prion probability of just over 12
”'
.
— .
ercent. Slavcnburg wondered If
e could Improve his odds,
making the contract against a
_2-2
_ club
__
spilt: a 40 percent
chance,
When West continued with the
spade queen at trick two.
_________ _ dropped
__
Slavcnburg
the Jack. No
longer
*
*havlrii
‘ \ to worry that
South held Jac (•fourth In spades.
West greedily
_ cashed his other
two spade
__ Slavenburg
!e tricks,
immediately discarded a ciub’
when the clubs did divide 2-2,
Slavcnburg had his contract,
A nice play, but when South
followed to the third spade. West
should have scented a stratagem. If South wanted spades

RvB s ra les Bsaa 0 — 1
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Dae. S4, I M S
You could have some wonderful opportunities to Improve
your financial or material posi­
tion In the year ahead. However,
you muat pay attention to details
In order to be certain you are
neither wasteful nor loo complAccni*
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Downplay your self-interest
today and acquiesce to the will
of the majority, even If you think
your waya are better or more
fun. Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Aatro-Oraph
Matchmaker can help you to
understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mall 92
plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmak­
er. P.O. Box 9 428. Cleveland.'
OH 44101-3428
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Strive to be methodical In all of
your endeavors today, because
there Is a chance you might
make an oversight. If this Is so.
rectify It Immediately'or a problem could result.
PM C88 (Feb. 20-March 20)
Instead of looking at everything

through rose-colored glasses
today, it might be wise to let
lessons you've learned guide
your behavior patterns,

E

A R B B (March 21-Aprtl 19) If
an arrangement Is not ail you
were told It would be, do not be
reluctant to negotiate. You could
ut something together that Is
elter for all concerned.

E

cl&amp;

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You are
not likely to be mentally comfortable today If you neglect
certain duties that you are responsible for. Instead of collectIng guilt for what you did not do.
take care of things,
VtROO (Aug. 23-8cpt. 22)
Your well-lntentlone'd budget
could end up as a mere scrape of
paper today If you Ignore II and

1* lasss

s,1&amp;

O B W N I (May 21-June 20)
You will only accortipltsh What la
necessary today through hard
work. Disappointment Is poaaltoo much on
ble If you
.
others to ball you out

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Consider the source today and
do not believe everything you
hear. Someone with ulterior
motives might try to manipulate
you and your opinions.
.
BAOITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Try to keep your lmputslveness within reasonable
bounds today. Carefully Invcsilgate any proposals that
require an investment on your
behalf. Do not do anything silly.
By L an iard Starr

methodical.

CAMCSB (June 21-Julv 22)
Do not
turn a deaf ear today to
_____
_____
na made by
advice or su(
you. Their
people who
concern about your
......welfare
could be quite helpful.

•..j1

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                    <text>November

26,

1992

N E W S D IG E S T

30 C ents

THURSDAY

P h o n e

r a t e

h ik e

n ix e d

C u sto m e r surve y fa ils to end o rse increase to call O rlando
Red C ro ss helps victim s of flood
SANFORD — Due lo torrential rains last night,
today, and heavy rains expected over the
weekend. Thanksgiving will not be so pleasant
for more than 25 families In the Sanford area.
The volunteer Disaster Action Team of the
Central Florida Chapter of the American Red
Cross have been working all day lo help local
families alTcctcd by the flooding In and around
Sanford.
Out of 25 families alTccted. five families will be
housed by the Red Cross over this Thanksgiving
holiday weekend. The other families will slay
with friends and relatives nnd will receive other
Red Cross assistance In the days ahead.
Thanks to the locnl McDonald's chain, ham­
burgers. orange drink nnd cookies are currently
being provided lo those affected, some who
haven’t eaten since yesterday, through the Red
Cross Emergency Response Vehicle.
Lodging, elothlng and groceries arc also being
coordinated at this lime.
Red Cross officials estimate Initial relief costs
at approximately 93.500.

B yJ. MARK BARPIILO
Herald Staff Writer
LAKE MARY — City officials say north
Seminole County telephone customers failed lo
endorse a 93.25 Increase In monthly charges lo
call Orlando toll-free, although most survey
respondents said they would accept the Increase.
If the results arc officially upheld, the mayors of
Lake Mary and Sanford and the chairman of the
Seminole County Commission, say they will
continue to push for an 80-ccnt Increase rejected

by the Florida Public Service Commission Aug.
18. Should the PSC uphold their earlier decision,
the locnl officials say they will accept a 25-ccnt
per call plan, at least for now.
“ If they reject the position we’ve had all along. I
would recommend the 25-ccnt plan and then
have a re-evaluation In two years." said Lake
Mary Mayor Randy Morris.
"We don't hove anything to lose with that
option." said Sanford Mayor Bcttye Smith.
" My position Is unchanged." said county
commission chairman Bob Sturm. "Wc'vc al­

ready paid more than we should for a number or
years."
•
’ City Manager John Litton said he counted the
ballots at the PSC's Tallahassee offices last week.
Litton said he counted 6.824 "yes" votes and
5.726 "no" voles for the $3.25 Increase.
PSC communications specialist Julian O'Pry
said under the survey rule In cITcct at the time, a
majority of all of the approximately 37.000
Southern Bell customers in north Seminole
County must support the plan before the PSC will
□ See Phone, Page BA

Woman suing Sheriff’s office
A Deltona County woman Is suing the
Seminole County Sheriffs Department claiming
a 1990 collision with a deputy left her with
medical and emotional Injuries.
The suit filed on behalf ofDovIc Little requests
at least 915.000 for pain and Buffering as a
result of the August 15. 1990 accident. The suit
was filed at the Seminole County courthouse by
Orlando attorney Hart Baker.
The suit claims that Little was driving her car
on 15th Street when It was struck In the rear by
a deputy driving a Seminole County patrol car.
The suit claims the deputy did not take
reasonable care in his driving nnd caused the
accident.
Since that time. Little has suffered symptoms
which Include pain, dlsblllty. disfigurement,
medical expenses and loss of Income, the suit
states. The suit claims that all of the Injuries arc
permanent In nature.
Baker has asked for a Jury trial on the matter,
although no court date has yet been set.

Thanksgiving •ths first holiday
The observance of Thanksgiving was the first
annual holiday by presidential proclamation.
President George Washington proclaimed Nov.
26. 1789 to be the first Thanksgiving Day. Both
houses of Congress had requested Washington
to recommend a day of public thanksgiving and
prayer.
The congressional request said it should be
observed. "By acknowledging with grateful
hearts the many and signal favors of Almighty
God. especially by affording them an opportuni­
ty to peaceably establish a form of government
for their safety and happiness."
The proclamation was Issued on Oct. 3,1989.
Tradition associates the day as being marked
by a feast. In keeping with the meal shared
between the Pilgrims and Indians after the
Pilgrim settlem ent was established near
Plymouth Rock In the 1620's.
During the years, scholars have attempted to
dispel the story. Some have claimed that the
Pilgrims Invited the Indians to the meal and
later captured or murdered some of them. '
Thanksgiving however, continues as a time to
gather friends and loved ones together, to share
a meal.
The holiday ranks near Christmas and Easter.
In businesses closings. It Is also the day for huge
parades and football classics.
The only thanks not given may come from
turkeys, who give their lives for today's
observance, but the turkey farmers more than
make up for It in showing their appreciation for
having the largest sale period of the year.

Correction
apt
In a caption
about the FACTS breakfast which
cd liIn Wednesday's Sanford Herald. Karen
uppeared
Wall, advertising director for FACTS and vice
president for human resources and corporate
services for AAA. was not Identified.

UM PKX
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Tatevlslan......

Showers return again
Mostly cloudy with a
40 percent chance of
afternoon th u n ­
derstorms. Highs In
the low 80s. Wind
south 10 to ISmph.

Far

Sharing a meal,
spirit of season
Tkachuk. who organized the event
more than 9360 was raised for tht
Soup-cr Supper.
was really tremendous lo see
SANFORD — Community celebra­ the"It outpouring
of love from the
tions for Thanksgiving got u n ­ community." Tkachuck
said.
derway Tuesday and really kicked
Proceeds from the Soup-cr Supper
Into gear on Wednesday.
between the
There was a little something for will be split equally
Sharing Center.
everyone, luoludlng those who Sanford.Christian
might not have a lot to be thankful Polncctta Avenue and 25th Street,
and the Rescue Outreach Mission,
for the rest of the year.
At the Crooms School of Choice on West 13th Street.
At the Crooms dinner people were
there was a grand meal for the walling
to get their food half an
needy from the community who
were Invited to eat. And at the hour before the doors opened.
"We Just started serving early."
Sanford Civic Center, the Mayor's principal
B arbara Kirby said.
Soup-cr Supper attracted a crowd of "There arc so
many here who need
those who hoped to help buy food
to be fed."
for the hungry.
The dinner, prepared by teachers,
On Tuesday evening the Sanand administrators at the
ford/Lakc Mary Christian Ministerial students
school
has
an annual tradi­
Fellowship, an Interdenominational tion In thebecome
Goldsboro
ministry, sponsored a Community among those who mightcommunity
otherwise
Service of Thanksgiving at the
have
nothing
to
eat
for
the
Congregational Christian Church of usually highlighted by food. holiday
Sanford.
Turkeys were donated lo the
The offering from the communltywldc service was donated to the □Baa Foad, Pag# BA____________
m ayor's second annual Soup-cr
Supper. According to the Rev. Tom R elated E ditorial Page 4A
By VICKI DaBORMIBR
Herald Stafl Writer_______________

State review
off shooting
promised

Crooms School of Choice student Tina Herring
Thanksgiving dinner Wednesday.
•

Inmates believe in
helping the needy
By VICKI DeSORMIBR
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — A group of Inmutcs
at the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility, who partake In the facili­
ty's work release program, believe
they have an obligation to help
those who arc less fortunate than
they.
The men. who arc serving time on
charges ranging from drug use to

Thankful, but wlahlng

Probation
procedures
scrutinized
By J , MARK BARPISLD
Herald Staff Writer_______________

»r
HiffM Staff Writer
SANFORD - The head of
three-county coalition raising que
lions about the death of a black ms
at the hands of a Volusia Count
deputy said he is satisfied with tf
response of the governor’s office an
the Florida Department of La
Enforcement.
"I feel like Tallahassee will take
very good look at this. I think the
will take this very seriously. I'm «
confident as I’ve ever been with tli
state," said Johnell Jackson.
Jackson and six others traveled I
Tallahassee Monday where the
met with Tracy Whitman, a legi
aide of Gov. Lawton Chiles, wh
promised a further review of th
case and a possible civil Inquest b
the state. The coalition reprt
sentatlves also spoke with FDL
officials who released the agency'
Investigative summary of the ma
ter.
The coalition Is raising question
about the shooting death of a
Osteen man. Leonard Acrec. 33. b
Volusia Deputy Michael Phllbrick 1
August in Deltona. Acrec was she
11 limes by the deputy who sal
Acrec attacked him.
"We arc not saying it was no
self-defense. We are asking why 11
shots?" Jackson said.
In addition, the coalition has
questioned why Phllbrick was hired
□Bee Review, Page BA

white collar crimes, have collected
9235 which they gave to the
Sanford Christian Sharing Center.
The money was used to purchase
turkeys and hams for the holiday
food baskets that were distributed
by the center for Thanksgiving.
"We have an obligation to .help
others In the community," Jesse
Andcison. who organized the other
inmates, or residents. In his group
□Boo Inm ates, Page BA

SANFORD - A review or Semi­
nole County Probation Department
rocedurcs may follow the arrest
londay of an employee on charges
she stole a probationer's check.
County A dm inistrative Judge
Fred Hitt said he would review the
case and determine If department
procedures should be changed.
"I don’t know If this case In­
dicates any changes are w ar­
ranted." said Hilt. "But ir they arc.
you can be sure we’ll make them."
But county probation manager
Yvonne Taylor expressed con­
fidence In her department.
"I feel confident with our pro- ,
ccdurcs which allowed us to to
catch this," said Taylor.
According to arrest reports. Hazel
Patricia Carter. 34. 2013 Wdter
Edge Drive. Deltona, was arrested .
Monday and charged with the theft
and forgery of a 9120 money order
received by the department Aug. 25
in payment for court-ordered fees. .
Carter was taken to the Seminole
County Jail and held on 91.500
bond, according to arrest reports.
Police stale Carter altered the
money order, which had been
payable to the county, and made it
payable to United Telephone. Re­
ports state that when the proba­
tioner came into the office lo make a
final payment, she was told her first
payment had not been received.
□Baa Probation, Pags BA ,

S

Megan Taylor, a first grader at Pine Crest Elementary School In
8anford, had a great time at the school's Thanksgiving feast earlier
this week. Taylor is thankful for all she has, but it's likely that all she
wants for Christmas Is her two front teeth J lo re Photos Page 6 A

A N D C H R IS T M A S ! E X T E N D E D H O U R S N O W

T H R U D E C . 21 M - F 9 - 9 , S A T . 9 - 6 , S U N . 1-5

�;

8antord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 28, 1982

NEW S FROM T H E REGION AND ACR O SS T H E S T A T E

Names of p ro stitu te ’s c lie n ts m ust be made public

Supreme Court may tattle embryo cate
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The U.S, Supreme Court may get the
last word In the legal battle over seven frozen human embryos.
Mary Sue Davis Stowe, whose 1069 divorce centered on what
would become of the embryos she and her former husband
Tostered while married, authorized a petition for appeal to the
high court, attorney R.D. Hash said Tuesday.
Now, he said, "We are just hoping and praying they will hear
the case.”
Hash, one of three lawyers representing Mrs. Stowe, who now
lives in Titusville. Fta.. said the appeal would be on grounds
that constitutional guarantees of privacy were violated.
He said he filed papers with the Tennessee Supreme Court to
delay its orders on the embryos' disposition until the U.S.
Supreme Court decides.
The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Monday the embryos
should be donated to research or discarded. Donating them
would require approval from both Mrs. Stowe and her former
husband. Junior Lewis Davis. Such approval la unlikely.

TALLAHASSEE - The client list or South
Florida prostitute Kathy Wlllcts. the deputy
sherKTs wife who tried the now-famous
"nymphomania defense.” must be made
ubtle, the Florida' Supreme Court, ruled
Wednesday.
The Justices. In n 6-1 decision that fortifies
public access to court documents, ruled that
the list of “John Docs” Is not protected by
the stale constitution's privacy amendment
because they had taken pari In criminal
activity.
"Any right or privacy that the Does might
have had Is limited by the circumstances

S

attention. At one point, Mrs. Wlllcts’
attorney claimed she slept with dozens of
men as therapy for nymphomania.
She eventually pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to probation, but Is now Jailed for
breaking probation. Her husband was first
sentenced to six months, but various related
chnrgcs since have netted him at least three
years In prison.
Testimony Indicated Wlllets ran the en­
terprise and even filmed his wife In bed with
clients from a nearby closet.
Those clients fought to keep their names
out of the news media even after defense
lawyers shared them with prosecutors,
which meant they became public records
under Florida law.

under which Ihcy assert that right." wrote
Justice Parker Lee McDonuld for the
majority. "The circumstances here do not
afTard them such a right.”
Justice Gerald Kogan Issued n sharp
dissent, comparing release of the names to
Nathanial Hawthorne's novel "The Scarlet
Letter,” In which a woman Is forced to wear
the letter ”A” In public because of her
adultery.
“People, have a constitutionally protected
Interest In their good names,” Kogan wrote.
Mrs. WUlets and her husband. Jeffrey,
who was a Broward County Sheriffs Deputy
when the case broke, were convicted or
operating an Illegal prostitution business In
February following a trial that drew national

Killer of
journalist
identified

AIDS victim goes home for holidays
ST. PETERSBURG — A weak and jaundiced Ricky Ray. the
eldest of three hemophiliac brothers with the AIDS virus, led a
hospital Wednesday, fulfilling a wish to spend Thanksgiving at
home with his family.
"We've got a lot to be thankftil for,” said his mother. Louise
Ray. "Even If Ricky doesn't make It through this, I feel we have
our miracle because he is going home even if It Is only for a
day. He went home, and that means a lot.”
The 15-year-old. who like his brothers is believed to have
contracted the virus through tainted blood products, entered
the hospital O ct 17 with pneumonia, an inflamed pancreas, a
viral Infection and internal bleeding.
"Ricky was talking from the very first days he came to the
hospital that he wanted to be home for the holidays,” said Dr.
Jerry Barbosa, his physician at AHChildren's Hospital.
On discharge be remained in serious condition, on oxygen,
unable to eat and dependent on high-calorie fluids to sustain
him. Although the Weeding had stopped the pneumonia hadn’t
cleared and he waa still fighting pancreatitis. Barbosa said.

UF cr e if i iww ooflgQt
GAINESVILLE — The University of Florida has created a
College of Natural Resources and Environment to coordinate
educational programs and degrees sought by students in those
fields.
Although the number of those courses now offered by the
state's largest school Is measured In the hundreds and involves
every cottejp on esmpus. new students have to be detectives to
weed them out and Integrate them Into degree programs, said
university Vice President Jam es M. Davidson.
"A s such, w e've recom m ended th a t a specific in­
terdisciplinary undergraduate degree program be developed to
provide an environmental mqfor to students from all colleges.”
said Davidson, who la vice president for Agriculture and
Natural Resources.
An interim dean will soon be appointed, and parts of the
the Call of 1993. A
curriculum are expected to be avauabk
be conducted once
national *e*rch for a dc*n of the college
the structure la oonolcte.
"Natural resource and environmental education programs at
UF could be fokmed Into one of the top programs among U.8.
universities thanks to a decade of recruiting faculty with
*'

&lt;■* w

i

r v w m w rw w rtw i

• r-r*a WIMIA yrt&gt;»iO,IA

‘ntU dttM SSEE -rA n appeals court judge Who stole a $80
remote control from a discount store should be removed from
the bench. Florida's Judicial Qualifications Ootnmiaalon says.
Another appellate Judge should be reprimanded by the state
Supreme Court for using his position to endorse a Supreme
Court member In a 1990 retention vote, the panel recom­
mended Tuesday.
The Supreme Court will consider the recommendations. It
isn't known when the high court will rule.
The commission aala Judge Eugene Garrett of the 4th
District Court of Appeals In Weal Palm Beach "intentionally
commuted a serious and grievous wrong” and should no
longer be ajudge.
Garrett told the 13-member panel In October his children's
scholastic problems, hta Job stress and the 41st anniversary of
his father's death left him so emotionally broken that he stole a
VCR on May 31 from a Target store In Defray BeaCh.
"The- stress Judge Qarrett was tinder a t the time of the
incident was no more and probably a great deal leas than the
stress he will encounter during he remainder of his work life.”,
the commission said in a 12-page recommendation.
The panel questioned testimony by Garrett’s psychiatrist
that several months of psychotherapy and medica tion would
prevent a recurrence of emotional problem s "which took 54
y e a n to reach a climax.”

LIMA. Peru (AP) — A newspa­
per reported Tuesday that a
witness has identified an impris­
oned Shining Path cadre as
involved in the beating and
strangulation of a U.S. Journalist
In 1989.
The body of Todd C. Smith, a
reporter for the Tampa Tribune
in Florida, was found in Novem­
ber 1989 on the outskirts of
Uchiza, 245 miles northwest of
Lima, in Peru's coca-growing
Upper Huallaga Valley. He was
28.
Smith had cone to Peru on
vacation to look into the drug
trade in Peru. A sign found with
his body indicated his killers
mistook him t&gt;r a U.S. Drug
Enforcem ent A dm inistration
agent.
Llma'a dally Ekpreso reported
Tuesday that a witness Iden­
tified Jose Antcnlo Manriquc as
one of the men who tortured and
killed Smith. The paper said
Manrique Is being held in Lima's
Canto Grande ptson on sub­
version charges.
Interior Ministry
spokeswoman Rosa Corrales
said she had no immediate
confirmation of the report.
"When I wm sleeping in a
comer of the csbtn, the Shining
Path ‘ hi embers brought in a
ybttrig Whitt man. whom I later
recognized as foe North Ameri­
shoot himself if Ms. Humphreys died first..but he can Journalist fiom photographs
panicked, wiped off the gun and drove home. published In the newspapers."
There, he called his mother, who told him to call the paper quoted the witness as
saying. "They began beating
Richardson sentenced Ingram as a violent him savagely aid shouting at
career criminal, citing a record of armed robbery, him, demanding to know the
burglary and escape that has spanned more than reason for his vlsi to Uchiza.”
three decades.
The newspaper said the wit­
In 1974, after being convicted of robbery. ness, who idcrtlfled Manrique
Ingram grabbed a bailiff's gun and escaped from during a Judiclri Investigation,
a Bibb County. Ga.. courtroom. He was caught was under police protection. The
and served a 15-year prison sentence.
witness' identity was withheld.
Ingram will serve at least 15 years before he is
The w itness said S m ith’s
released, prosecutor Russ Bauscn said.
hands were tied while he was
Defense attorney Doug Reynolds told the Judge beaten on the head and chest
the woman's death had taken an emotional toll and that when he lost con­
on Ingram, pointing out that his hair turned from sciousness. the rebels strangled
blondto gray over the past six months.
him.
The com m ent angered Ms. H um phreys'
According to fotpreso. Smith's
youngest sister. Mary Ann Snoddy.
personal affects were found in
"She’s dead, and he’a worried about gray Manrique'a possession when he
hair?" Ms. Snoddy asked. "Whether or not he waa arrested sometime in 1990,
pulled the trigger, he murdered her. Judge, and The newspaper said another
there is no reason he should be allowed back on s u s p e c t , H e c to r A d o l p h o
the streets.”
Rodrigues, was dao being held.
Another sister. Helen Sawyer, said she prayed
Peru is the murce of more
Ingram would not forget the looks on the (aces or than half of the world’s supply of
the victim's three children, who were in the coca leaf, the tm material used
courtroom.
to produce cocakie.

Deadly game nets defendant
30 years as career crilninatl
MELBOURNE (AP) - Albert Denver Ingram
was a career criminal, and h it biggest crime was
handing a woman a gun she used to kill herself, a
Judge has ruled.
"In the culmination of your career as a
criminal, you participated In the destruction of,
another person’s life." Circuit Judge Edward
Richardson told Ingram Tuesday In sentencing
him to 30 years In prison.
Ingram, 49. pleaded no contest in October to
assisting Kathy Ann Humphreys kill herself as
they played Russian roulette outside the Corner
bar in Cocoa. Ms. Humphreys. 35. was the
mother of three children.
"This waa far from a game.'' the Judge said. "It
waa a true human tragedy,”
Ingram told police He met Ma. Humphreys at
the bar the night oT April 5 and they had drinks.
He said he waa despondent over his wife’s death
and felt life wasn't worth living.
The conversation turned to suicide. Ingram
drove to his trailer home, got his roommate's
loaded .357-Magnum revolver and relumed to the
bar. He told authorities he emptied Ihe chamber
except for one bullet and he and Ma. Humphreys
spun the cylinder.
'T h e pair argued over
ihe woman took the glia

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■UNSAY
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OmhmUm W Vi
The temperakire at S p.m. charmtsMC.
Wednesday was 84 degrees and
Wednesday’s etrly morning law g jgg,..
waa 71. as recorded by the rimsrariti
National Weatlur Service at the Ostua-rt warm
Orlando International Airport.
S p y ,...
Other W eatiw Service data:
Strait

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�Holiday party
For tha past seven year* the
Sanford Grandmother's Club
has provided a holiday party
for. youtha at tha JuvenileOatantlon Cantor In Seminole
County. Tha grandm others
have providad food, decora­
tio n s and a lo t of love.
According to Mary Smith,
president and minister, tha
number of Juwilleo In deten­
tion has dropped. Serving tha
Juveniles are (tom left) Allien

Campaign contributions
SANFORD — Campaign con­
tributions for the two women
running for mayor of Sanford
were almost at the same level
during the first six week report­
ing period. Contributions to City
Commission District 1 can­
didates were varied.
Incumbent mayoral candidate
Bettye Smith reported 84.775 in
contributions, and 82.178.61 In
expenses. Her opponent, Sara
Jacobson reptrted 84,630 In
contributions. 81.000 In in-kind
contributions, and 84.237 In
L a rg e r c o n tr ib u tio n s to
Smith’s campdgn Include the
following: Jeno Pauluccl. 8150;
Elisabeth Whitky, 8200; MSA
D e v e lo p m e n t C o .. 8 2 5 0 :
Armstrong Farms. 8300: AOK
Tires. 8150: Shirley Schilke.
8150.
8100 contributions were given
to Smith's campdgn from Rob­
ert E. Daehn. Jones E. Quinn,
J.B. Cleveland, Jo h n Sauls,
Fisher. Laurence A Deen. Fred
Streetman. Tony Rusal, Anne
Wallace and David Kraselse.
In addition. Anith gave a total
of82,500to herown campaign.
Larger poatrtiutiona to Sara
Jacobson's campaign Included a
total of 8300 fnxn Vera Spears.
The majority of the other con-

t r l b u t l o n e w ere in SlO O
amounts. They were reported
from the following: Doris A.
Brown. Dick Jo y c e . L aura
Bracken, Raymcnd Bracken. Bill
Bracken. William Klrchner. Ron
Jefferson. Ludfc Pugh. Francis
Oliver. Martha Vancy, Joyce
Malone. Country Courtyard. D.
Abney. Ross Robert, and Tom
Beck.
SlOO contributions were also
given to Jacobmn from Shirley
Moak. Sally Geary. Joe Gazll,
Peggy Tetan. Kyndl Henderson.
M ildred Telnberg. D orothy
Powell, and Rose Jacobson.
Sara Jacobson donated a total
of S I. 199 to her own campaign.
The leader In campaign con­
tributions among the four can­
didates seeking election to the
District 1 City Cbmmission seat
was Incumbent Lon Howell.
Howell reixrted total con­
tributions or SB.B30 plus an
additional SS.000 in in-kind do­
nations. His experwes during the
first six weeks totaled SI.533.14.
Among the larger contribu­
tions to Howell k campaign were
th e following: Lake Je s su p
Groves, SBOO; Ekrly Childhood
Developm ent Center, S120:
Doudney Surveyor. 8250; Oaks
8200; Lake
.Motgpe
Support
8250:
8200; Lochrane Engineering,

8250: Graig Bhtterson, 8206;
MSA Development Co.. 8250;
Shutts St Bowen 8250. and 8A3
Investments. 8150.
Howell received 8100 con­
tributions each from the follow­
ing: McLain Place A Associates,
Fellas Robinson of Oolden Rule
Housing. Jesse "Red" Cleve­
land, Jeno Pauluccl, Cablevlsion
of Central Fiords. Baird Ray
N issan, Dot Rtwell. F isher
Laurence A Deal, Bob Parnell,
Eoghan Kelley, fcfeck Cleveland.
Jerry Mills. Les Owens, Tony
Rusal, Speer A Speer, Schilke
Enterprises, Rxfcbte Robertson.
Jr.. Rich Plan. Adcock Roofing.
Briar ConstrucSon, Melvin Sis­
kind, and LauraSoUien.
District I candidate Jordan
Beckner declared total contribu­
tions of 82.150, with expenses at
81,765.57.

Larger contributions were:
Bob Hllson St Company, S500:
AOK Tire Mart. 8160. and Joe
Ward St Co., S25Q
SlOO contrtbulons were given
from Barry Phdps Richardson.
J o h n 8 a u ls A gency, L ake
Monroe Haibouc Bill Hicks Auto
Sales, and Steve Lawrence.
Beckner reported contributing
8600 of his own money into the
campaign fund.
D istrict 1 can d id ate Bob
Church reported a total of S47S
in contributions, and S10S in
e e lv e d fro m L ak e M onroe
Marins, Betty Yates and BUI
Miller. Church completed the
fund with a peaonai contribu­
tion.
D istric t 1 c a n d id a te Bilk

F R I D A Y , N O V E M B E R 2 7 th 8 :0 0 a .m . “ T I L 1 1 :0 0 a .m
AFTER

HOURS PRICES WILL RETURN TO REGULAR OR SALE PRICES!

SALE 1 7 .9 9
A H K g U ttts

T lfU a w M

SA LE 9 . 9 9

SALE lO 9 9

SALE 8 . 9 9

SA LE 3.77

�Sanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 26, 1962

FLA.MT71

The period between Election Day and Inaugu­
ration Day Is no fun lo re defeated president, end
one could forgive George Bush for feeling
rebellious! y unwilling to &lt;£&gt; anybody any fovora
Just now. But there te ope great act of healing
which la within hie power , and which would
h it presidency with a gesture that
history would deem profoundly wlee. That would
be to. pardon Gap Weinberger and ell others
cssvrq wnn u iiu ik s m oonnecuon witn uic
tnwOontrmaflkir.
Let‘a begin by remembering whet all the
■hooting waa about. The Driiw^f wtv, naturally,

EDITORIALS

p n x c ifc a
m m

To exam ine th e m eanln I o f th ta holiday,
the nam e m ight be brlel y sp lit in to two
words. "T h an k s," a n d "glvt
In m ost cases, th a n k s m &amp; * . difficult to
express if o th ers refuse to
Probably no o th e r holiday focuses a s m u ch
on th e peeda o f th o se w ho hav e little.
U nfortunately, m u ch o f th e h elp la only for
this one day. a n d th is one m eal.
In Sanford, L ake Mary, a n d th e su rro u n d in g
areas, m any organlxatlona hav e been con*
ducting spectal tu n d raising events. Proceeds
go to Insure th a t th e leas fo rtu n ate will have
reason to give th a n k s for th ta day.
T urkeys have been cooked a n d sold. soup,
and even grtta have been served. Money
obtained from th e se e v en ts w in help provide a
special m eal for fam ilies selected b y various
churches In th e a re a, a s well a a th e Sanford
C hristian S harin g C en ter a n d th e Rescue
O utreach Mission.
None of th is help w ould b e possible w ithout
the people w ho w ork o n th e protects, an d th e
ciUsens w ho p articipate th ro d g b th e ir flnan*
d a l support.
T he city officials an d d t ts e n t w ho w orked
diligently yesterday a t th e Lake Mary Ctvic
Im provem ent Associa tion building cooking
turkeys for sale a s w d l a s g h w a w a y it th ose
w ho helped in d ie Sanford C h am b er o f
Com m erce turkey sale, th e pe rson a w ho
volunteered to cook a t th e M ayor's 8 o u p « r
Supper: * "d dig ch u rch w orkers, m a n y o f

io

view w e

muc

ot mu n iir a nuoiDCT ot

to trait* in flotation of our public posture

Yet the Democrats have in aided on treating
the whole affair. and the failure of officials of the
executive brand) to tcllthcm all about ft, as
some grea t leaton In
th e .'co n stitu tio n al
ooiifiuom of tiB 6i*
ecutlve branch to a
Congress of the op*
poaite party.
■W M l
Significantly, de1 J Q V f
spite the desperate
effort* of s p e c ial
prosecutor Lawrence
\
W alsh to salv ag e

I

The period
aman
hruin*
felufa]
&gt;lmded

Inauguration
Day fa no fun
for a dafsated
president, j

cf withholding information from

4*3 T o
W oR LP .

G o F fflU R e

P tSSVS'JT
P S R M TS .

B U T W e G R a W U f?
G o T T/R ttp . S P V fc P

I

Congress, end that's all.
But Mr. Waldi has one last hope, before his
Investigation goes down the tube. Discovering
that the personal notes of Reagan Defense
Secretary Casmr Weinberger, which Weinberger
had voluntarily turned over to the Library of
Congress, contain comments on executive
branch conferences dealing with the anna sales,
Walsh has indicted Weinberger for falling to
bring these records up during ltterrogsUona by
his office. The irony Is that tic notes demon­
strate that Weinberger himself Wrongly opposed
the very sales t u t Walsh has tried so long (and
so unsucccsalUltr) to criminalise.
So now Caspar Weinberger m ust find the
millions It will take to round out Lawrence
Walsh's record as s total failure, or stand
convicted of haring tried to conceal his own
opposition to the alleged misdeeds that Walsh
was assigned to Investigate.
This pathetic farce, bom of the inevitable
conflict between presidents and Congresses of
different parties, and perpetuated by the natural
desire of the Democrats to keep the show going
aa long as there are any Republicans left
unlndtcted, unImpoverished, and undefamed,
can be brought to an end by O eagc Bush with a
■treks of hie pen.______

An open le tte r
to So c k s C linton
Dear Socks:
Let me Introduce myself. I am Samantha, a
female tabby and native Washingtonian, bom
at the Animal Rescue League In March 19B8.
At the tender age of six weeks or so. I allowed
myself to be adopted by the character who
writes this column. He calls himself a
Curmudgeon, but he didn't know the mean­
ing of the word until the day he took me
home.
.
---------First thing 1 did
when they set me
down In the kitchen.
I strolled over to the
dog of the house —
P e n d le to n Is h is
name — and I gave
him a atnack across
the nose. Left ook, I
think It was. Never
had a minute's troub te jritc rJ h a L 1 am
Mas, queen of the
m a n s e .'T T h e d d g
Ite lly o u th li
knows. My feeders
story, Socks,
sn d litter-changers
because
know.
frankly, you
1 tell you this story.
need a little
aaaartlvanaat
training, j
little assertiveness
training. Remember
whst Cervantes said:
"Those who'll play
with cats must expect to be scratched."
When those cameramen held you aloft the
other day there In Little Rock, you should
have swatted one of them squarely screes the
nose. Drawn a little OpoalUve. If you know
what I mean. It would have been the last time
one oTthose Visigoths grabbed you.
And letting those pa pa r a n I lure you
through the gate at the governor's mansion
with a Utile catnip so they could photograph
you. ReaUy, Bocks. Beguiled with a little herb.
Least you could've done la make them bait
you with Whiskas Original Recipe. What It
nods down to Is dignity, Bocks. "The cat la
the Tfftt dignified of Ml animals." wrote
novelist Louis Bromfleld., "He Is uniquely
sensitive to any threat to his dignity.
Remember that, Socks. You wUl be repre­
senting an M|vHin | and noble breed. You
m ust reUUn your dignity.
I do wish to compUmenl you. however, on
the wonderful way you have trained the U tter
C hangerO ect After the t e t w with thotr
cameramen
you ud* he out out the
word that Invasions of your privacy would
not be tolerated. "Special note to all ptt u
from the highest authority," read the warn*
tog from the d fotou staff. "Don't touch the
cat agMu." Nice.

f

logtoti (which
the fw****! la already
parakigevsry word and wink ta m Clinton and
his advisers a s pH H r t far running the

not be giving without

the

New Day and wound up befog criticised J b r
W ashington Hypocrisy*as*Usual. He an*
nouacod Ughter-than-cvsr guidelines for

■&gt;»
. m i'.'i
J
i | g' *' "^

Let's talk about dogs for a minute. You
realise, of course, that you will be getting a lot
of grief from canine fanciers who think your
UUer Changer should get a dog. Cats are
finicky premiers, thsy say. Dogs are more

Couple of other bits of advice, Bocks. Your
liter Changer la going to be cornered many
And they

LETTER8 TO EDITOR
m ust ks Mgned. fogfode the address of the
writer and n davtime telcnhone number.
Letters should be on s single subject and be
n jflje w u w - m
m g g g ah

and had to uas 'a ghostw riter. If you
abaohitcty cannot resist the temptation to
record your observations, then please k s m s
little WordPerfect
It gets back to dignity, ffftrht, Remember

�*.

chatting with gussts at tha Mayor's 8oup-tr
SupparWsdnsadsy.

project by several Las Vegas
hotels, as they lave been In the

Inmates
ia

to pwticlpate in the
^ t t f e 'r e all woiklng." he said.
"We have some money and
when I suggested this the others
were ready to hefc."
Preston Alim, a counselor
with the work release program,
said the goal of the program la to

Probation
IA
Postal Inspectors traced the
money order, and found U was
used to pay fto Carter's tele­
phone account, according to
reports. Carter resigned when
c o n fro n te d and re p a id th e
county, according to reports.

help the reaidetts get their lives
bock In order and to "start
thinking strelgM."
He thinks the docen men who
contributed to tie money (or this
cause are on th e ir way to
returning to society as more
productive.
"I1 believe
bellev they are getting
their lives straight again." he
Ju a n Adrlatlco said he Is
serving time for "crimes against
the envlronmert." He said he
filled In some wetlands when
working as a developer last year.
Now be feels it b Important to do
something for hht Ifellow m a
He believes that helping to
feed those who are hungry will
help others te a r 'th e gospel,
which he would like to spread to
as many as possitie.

" I f som eone Is h u n g ry ."
Adrlatlco said, 'lie to not going
to listen to the W ad of Qpd.
Some of the other residents
who did not w ait to give their
names said they thought the
plan was a good one.
"I know what It's like to have
no food and Uttle hope of getting
any." one man a id . ‘1 want this
for them. I d m 't need any
recognition for me."
Anderson aafcl that the resi­
dents all agreed that the project
was a worthy muse and they
believe they cm . make a dif­
ference, even If t to a small one.
In the llvea of some people.
"We are doing something that
I guess we hope someone would
do for ua In the aune situation."
he said.

Review
IA
when he had three pre­
vious com pislits of brutality
against him. Inducting an inci­
dent in Allentown. N.H.. where
Investigated for beating a
he
prisonerrtnaceU
in
.
PhUbtlck .was flredt,Tuesday.
from the department because
officials alleged he ccgscealcd the
previous incidents or brutality
when applying fof the Volusia
job.
Jackson said the FDLE In­
vestigative summary does give
reasons to question whether
excessive force was used
i t does give us some belief
that excessive force was used.
Now there to foe question of
J
by legal standards,"

car

The report does quote two
witnesses who raid the
fired a second buret of

ie s l

T he lunchroom s ta ffs a t
Midway and Ooklsboro elemen­
tary schools and Sanford Middle
School donated their time to
cook the stuffing •
"We had a complete tradi­
tional dinner," Sid Pollock, the
Crooms school volunteer who
coordinated the event “It’s kind
of like a bit of dabtlity for these
people who don't have much
stability."
Many of those who were fed at

Taylor, Sanford.
WUaou-Etcheberger Mortuary,
Inc.. Sanford, to charge of ar­
rangements.
Eimimt H. Bbbee. 80, of 300
W. Airport Blvd.. Apt. 136.
Sanford, died Ufedneeday. Nov.
38. at Vicar's Landing Health
Center. Jacksonville. Bom Aug.
39. 1003. In Michigan, she
moved to Sanfoal in 1008. She
waa a teacher to the Srm lnolf
1 C w nty school system for 31
yearn and a member of the P in t
Presbyterian Church. Sanford.
Mrs. B isbee was a lifetim e
member of the National TeachI er's Association end of the Bernh»tesU Oramty Teacher's Assocto-

The Rev. Jam e s D evante
Hsgln, 74. of 3870 W. 33rd St..
Sanford, died Monday. Nov. 33.
at hto residence. He waa bora
July 4. 1019. in Medtoon, and
•moved to Sanfcxtf in 1038 from

Survivors include daughter.
B eatrice Oelb. F arm ington.
Conn.s son, Hand ton J.. Jack­
sonville; sister. Beatrice Fowler.
S t. P e te r s b u r g ! fo u r
grandchlldcn a id two great­
grandchildren.
O ram kow Funeral
Sanford. In chwge of

T ht Rev. Hagto was pastor of
Antioch M.B. Church. Oviedo.
He was a member of Congress
Number One of the P in t South
Florida Missionary Baptist Asso­
ciation. the TrlClty Ministerial
Association of Seminole County.
D e L a n d /S a n f o r d B a p t i s t
Fellowship Araociation. Pro­
gressive M A S Baptist State
Convention of Florida and the
P int South Fkrtda Missionary
Baptist District Association. He
waa also a member of the
Seminole County Chapter of
NAACP. AARP end chairmen of
the Community Service Block
Grant Advisory Board of Semi­
nole County. He waa an Army
veteran of World War n.
Survivors include wife. AwUf
C., Sanfordi toothers. B. P.
Davto.
sisters. Rosa
B row n. M adison a n d Lora

Joaie Van Horn Ferrando. 88.
890 W. Church Ave.. Longwood.
died Wednesday. Nov. 25. at
South Sem inole Community
Hospital. Longwood. Bora Sept.
36. 1004. in Harbor View, she
moved to Longwood in 1033
from Apopka. She was a home­
maker and waa nursery worker
with Calvary Assembly ofOod in
Winter Park. She was a member
of the First Baptist Church of
Longwood.
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e s o n s .
Thomas M. Van Horn. Fayet­
teville, N.C., Joseph "Buck" Van
Horn, longwood, David "Pete"
Van H o n , . ------Margap •
Apopka; Ms
grand, liiuiren and
id l O ggreatr

grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home. Longwood. In charge of arrange­
ments.
D.C. W illiam s. 64. 1008
Summerlin Avc. Sanford, died
Tuesday. Nov. 34. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Born Jan. 10. 1928, In East
Point he moved to Sanford In
1040 from Baldwin. He waa a
laborer and a Baptist
S u r v iv o rs In c lu d e s o n s .
Bernard *"8 Lawrence Hicks.
OainesvUle; brothers, Albert.
Sanford. Arthur Lee. Newark.
NJ.s Maters, Tennessee Jones,
Bast Orange. N.J.; Eamestine
J a c k s o n , S a n fo rd ; A lv e ra
FtelffT. ftonfnrrt
Wltoon-Eichetoerger Mortuary.
Inc., Sanford, to charge of ar-

began, but Major Bettye Smith
said many bought tickets, but
really had no pirns to come and
eat.
"I think the fcfea is to raise
and people just want to help,'
she said.
Paul Porter, a partner with
Conklin, Porter and Holmes, said
that he bought a ticket at the
door even though his Company
to a corporate
of the
event.
"This to a fiod cause." he
said. "I don't mind ghrlng when
it comes to something like this."

Phone
it.

The 6.834 "jea"
would foil short of the more than
16.000 votes needed to approve
the plan under the rule. Even
undrr new P8C i n n i n g rules,
the votes would (all to endorse
the plan.
OrPry said the P8C tally would
not be released until Jan. 7 and
refused to s a in t the accuracy of
Lttton's count. The P8C will
review the results and the rec­
ommendation of PSC staff Jan.
10. PSC staff had recommended
the 28-cent-per&lt;all plan should
the 63.35 per month plan fall.
Last year. Late Mary commis­
s io n e rs. w ith S an fo rd an d

"It should be noted that In the
opinion of the medical examiner,
the wound locations and re­
spective tntfectcvy do not sup­
port or suggest that deliberate
■hots were Bred while Acree was
lying prone on Us sidewalk."
The report notes that while
PhllMek had 1 never been intyolvif|lln « ghosting before this
tnddem; that to had been the* vIBultMl
the subject of an tiiem al and crimi­ Klrchner reported a total con­
suspect was on foe ground (and) nal tnveatigatkn relative to the tribution am ount o f $1,003
"probably didn't pose a threat to
during the first six weeks, with
the dejnjty, and the last three
During the
th yean I960 and 0697.83 in expenses.
shots were not jmUfled."
1063. Acree * " total of 30
Contributions included 0300
The report quotes Phil brick as
Including aggravvated from Reflections, $800 from
■eying Acree wrestled his asp
officer
Laura Bracken, and $100 from
baton away Btsn the deputy's restating arrest with violence. Andrew Bracken
gunbult and began hitting him
In all
campaign
with it while shouting. "I'm
trlbutioos
were
given
for
yOU«- Witt
to kill sou."
Jackson said his group will
confirm the deputy was being hit obtain a copy of the medical
S an fo rd 's city election la
with the baton when be started examiner's repot today before scheduled
Tuesday. Dec. 8. If
Bring at Acree.
wuiting firm plans about other r e q u ire d for
in
th e m u ltip le The si immary also states that.
candidate district 1 race, a
run-off election will be held on
Dec. 33.
when Acree was on the ground.
The report states that "(Mrs.
Sharon) Kraraewskl fu rth sr
stated that the deputy then Bred
several shots at the black male,
who she deaedbea as already
being on the ground."
The report ako quotes a Mrs.

the dinner are homeless.
Some are Indgent and could
not afford a tradtlonal meal with
all thetiimmlnm.
"They mighthave been eating
a p e a n u t b u tte r an d jeUy
sandwich Just like every other
day." Pollock sdd.
For those who could not come
to Crooms, the meals were
packaged up and brought to
their homes. More than BOO
meals were sent out to the
community.
The crowd was slower In
arriving at the 8oup«r Suppor.
Few were seated by 5:30 p.m..
half an hour after the event

county commbslon following
suit, asked the PSC to extend the
local service calling area for
north Seminole County custom­
ers to include Orlando. Many
Seminole County residents work
in the Orlando wea and there to
a significant m o u n t of trade
between the two communities,
they argued.
Further. Sentoole County of­
ficials argued foe monthly rate
should be no hffher than the fee

paid by Orlando custom ers
because local residents would
receive a similar level of service.
North Seminole County custom­
ers were afrea^r 80 cents leas
than Orlando custom ers for
about half the callng area.
. Southern Bell officials argued
there eras not “""“ j*1 telephone
traffic between foe two communtttoe to warrant the iii^ i h fee
but were willing to

�0A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 26, 1092

In the spirit of Thanksgiving

IB * 1
nfot11
Eb ’ , &gt;»*

H«r*M Photo fey Richard Hopklnt

i Community Improvement Association and Lake
i Mary city officials joined together In cooking over
110 turkeys yesterday morning. The turkeys were
* sold with profits paying for an additional number
, -which were given through local churches to needy
, families. Lined up behind the grill, left to right,

City Commissioner David Mealor, CIA President
Brian Loe, CIA members Vern Feddersen and Oils
Sjoblom, newly elected Mayor Lowry Rockett with
wife Pat, and CIA members Ty Dedman and John
Connelly.

Fannie Miller, teacher, In stru c ts C hapter
1/Mlgrant Program students at Midway Elemen-

tary as they prepare to re-enact the first
Thanksgiving.

Twonly baskets of food for needy families In
Sanford were prepared by employees of Kmart.
Body Eastham, left, personnel director, and Shelia

ntfiw nww wf ipsmf vRwvm
Templeton, supervisor of checkouts, load the
truck for delivery.

Harald Photo feyMarva Hawkln*

HacU PfeUfefefWiliii'dHipfelM

n f e i S l v n w ie

I

The pre-K and kindergarten claeeee of Heathrow Elementary School enjoy their teaet in claee.

HEY KIDS!
WIN A
CHRISTMAS
TEDDY

American Legion Post S3 donated 33 baskets of food to the needy
for Thanksgiving. Preparing the boxes for delivery are post members
(from left), Cmdr. Jim Smith, Alma Herndon and Tony Bruno. Also
assisting were Gary Hamilton and Robert Barrett.

C o n te s t R u le s
1. Contest is open to children
ages 3-B years of age; 6-8
years of age; 9-11 years of age.
3. Paints, w ater color or
crayon may be used.
3. E ntries will be judged on the
basis of originality and
neatness for each age group.
Decision of the judges is final.
4. Entries m ust be mailed or
brought to the Sanford Herald
by Dec. Slat.
6. Prizes will be awarded
Dec. 23rd.
6. W inners will appear in the
Sanford Herald Dec. 24th.

Pine Crest Elementaiy School student April Piersall enjoys a special
feast at her school recently, in preparation for Thanksgiving today.

�t t - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thurodty, November 26, 1902

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Takeadvantage olthis special oHer
This it • great opportunity for you to onjoy th# tamo great result# ss
our regular classified customers at no cost to you. Just follow th#sa
Instructions.
1. Ads will b# sch#dul#d to run for 10 days.
2. Fries of Itarn must ba statsd In tha ad and ba $100 or lass.
Only 1 1tem par ad and 1 ad par household par wash.
4. You should call and canes! as soon as Itarn sails.
0. Available to Individuals (non Commercial) only. Doss not
apply to rantala or garage A yard salsa.
The ad must ba on tha form shown below and either ba
mailed In or presented In parson fully prepared to tha
tenfold Herald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start as soon as possible.
a. Classified Managements deolslon on copy acceptability will
ba final.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 28, 1992 - SB

All'County—
Cm Ham S tram IB
playjust on offense.
He responded by rushing for
BOO y a rd s and sco rin g 10
touchdowns In his next three
games.
Butler, a secatd-team selec­
tion last year as a receiver, la the
perfect compllmait to Washing­
ton. As the fiflback In Lake
B ra n tle y 's flexbone a tta c k .
Butler Is called upon to pick up
tough yards through the middle
of the defense. He finished the
season with 760 yards rushing
on 131 carries, scoring 12
touchdowns.
Bacond tarns: Ervin Alex­
ander and Paul B us, Oviedo,
RECEIVERS: Pete Kuc. Lake
Mary, and Tony Duncan. Semi­
nole. '
Kuc was the other secondteam selection at receiver last
year with Butler. This year, Kuc
was far and away the county
leader in recepttms. catching 37
passes for S19 yards and seven
touchdowns (allcounty bests).
Duncan, a member of Semi­
nole's Class 3A state champion­
ship baseball team last spring,
was second In receiving yardage
(444) and touchdown catches
( f o u r ) t o Ku c . H i s 2 4 . 7
yard-per-catch average was the
second highest In the county
among receivers with five or
more catches.
Os sand te ase Mike Werner.
Lake Mary, and Matt Diemer.
Seminole.
TIGHT ERIE Rob Stanton.
Lake Howell.
In the past, we've gone with
three running tacks and a pair
of receivers on the All-County
/team and did not select a tight
end. But Stanton, who was an
All-County pick as an offensive
lineman last year, made an
Impressive switch to tight end
this year.
Not only docs Stanton still
have the size (6 feet 5 inches,
2S7 pounds) and ability that
makes him one of the toughest
blockers In the state, he also
caught 14 passes for 206 yards
(19.0 per catch) and a
touchdown.

an outstanding year, kicking 10
field goals and 10 extra points to
finish with 40 prints, 10th best
In the county aid tops among
kickers.
Walravcn was paid the ul­
timate compllmstt by Seminole
head coach Emory Blake, who
would opt to kfckoff whenever
given the option, counting on
Walraven's leg to pin opponents
deep In their own end ■of the
field.
Osoond te a m Tim LeCroix.
Lake Brantley,
DKMNIE
DEFENSIVE LINE: Trevor
Pryce. Lake Howell: Donte Bell,
Lyman: Seth Wlepklng, Lake
Brantley: and Johnny Oolden,
Seminole.
At the risk of being redundant,
this quartet Is fast and strong,
th e s t u f f th a t o f f e n s iv e

nightmares arc made of. There's
no running awqy from any of
them and they dl are ferocious
ladders.
This is the second selection to
the All-County team for Pryce
while Oolden and Wlepklng were
second-team chdces a year ago.
B acaad te a m Ron Moore.
Seminole: Chris Schlachter,
Lake Brantley: Gerald Butler.
Seminole; and LaDaryl Fenney,
Lyman.
LINEBACKERS: Daryl Bush.
Lake Brantley: Paul Clayton.
Lake Mary: Sam Becker. Semi­
nole: and Brian Cross. Lake
Brantley.
Perhaps the top export of
Seminole County In recent years
Is linebackers. Every year, there
seems to be another batch who
carry the tag of “potential AllState" or "AllAmerican can­
didate."

For Bush, who Is an AllAmerican canddate, this Is his
third consecutive selection to the
Sanford Herald All-County team.
This Is Claytonfc second time on
the list.
Becker and Ooss have both
excelled under trying
circum stances, Becker being
s h o u l d e r e d with t h e r e ­
sponsibilities rf being Semi­
nole's defensive captain while
Cross was the Urget of offenses
who were trying to avoid Bush
and Wlepklng.
Oacead team : Emory Green.
Seminole; Greg Menello. Lake
Mary: Dallas am pson, Lyman;
Jamie Iracleancs, Lake Mary.
DEFENSIVE BACKS: Matt
Parker, Semlnde; J.D. Russell,
Lake Brantley; Antljuan Battle.
Oviedo.
In Seminole County, It's not
enough for a defensive back to

be quick or be a dependable
open-field tackier. With the way
the ball gets thrown around in
the Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence. a defensive back has to be
able to catch the ball as well as
any receiver.
How good are Parker. Russell
and Battle? Al three of them
could start on offense for any
team in the couity and probably
still make the All-County team.
And the second group Is only a
shade behind ttrm .
Russell, a second-team selec­
tion last year, was Involved In
several big ofTmslve plays for
Lake Brantley, Including the
double pass play that beat Lake
Mary. Battle, who led the Oviedo
defense with sewn Interceptions
and three blocked kicks, also
caught three panes on olfense.
And Parker imy be the best
athlete of the btneh.

Second te a m Jarrett Blabee.
Oviedo: Roger Green, Oviedo:
Kevin Ladd, Laic Mary.
PUNTER: Chad Kesaler, Lake
Mary.
This was almmt as close a call
as the quarterback selection.
Baaed strictly on statistics,
Lyman's Mike Krupa deserves to
be the All-Courty choice. But
Kessler, who was a second-team
selection last year, constantly
found himself putting in situa­
tions where he had to drop the
ball In or angle It out of bounds
rather than let Itfly.
If there's - any doubt about
K essler's qualifications, his
average distance per kick was
three-tenths of a yard less than
Krupa's (30,4-38.1) despite con­
stantly having to kick In cloae
quarters.
Bacond te a m Mike Krupa.
Lyman.

B o e o a d te a a n T e rra n c e
Jones, Seminole
OFFENSIVE LIRBi P aul
Flguenlck and ffcul Bonadonna.
O viedo: J a y P a rb e r, L ake
Brantley; Jon Hunmond, Lake
Howell: and Anckeaa Key, Semi­
nole.
This Is the one area where we
sought Input from other sources,
asking defensive coaches which
opponents' oflent(v«&lt; lines had
given them the snoot trouble,
then asking coaches from those
schools which of their linemen
While this may not be the
most physically imposing group
— Hammond B the only one
whose weight la hated a t 300
p o u n d s w h ile H a m m o n d ,
Flguenlck and Bonadonna are
each listed as Icing 6 feet 2
• Inches tall — they are all very
strong and very cyiick.
• B o o b s * ta a a a t T h e r o n
Houston, Lake Howell: Chad
Beland, Lyman; Marcus Featell,
Lake Maty; Jcmh Hofeboom,
Lake Brantley: and Courtney
: i-AAfa*, Beminok,
. F L A G E K IC K B B i J a s o n
' Walraven, Semtocrie.
In a county heavily populated
with solid kickers, Walraven had

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�4B - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 26, 1992

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday, November 26, 1992 - SB

Coach

Packers, G re e n Bay faithful pine for return to ‘T itle to w n ’

C o n tin u e d fro m IB

AP S ports Writer
GREEN HAY. Win. - For S25.D5. you ra n still
gel a single room at th e T itleto w n Motel. Just op
th e street from Victory lilvd. a co u p le of blocks
aw ay from L o m bardi A venue a n d L am h ra u Field,
hom e of th e G reen May P ackers. T h e place Is a
little Irayed at th e edges, hut th e n , u n til th e last
lew w eeks, th e P ack ers have been. loo.
T itletow n.
T hai h a s a c e rta in ring to It. d o esn 't It? T h is
niapdol tow n ad o p ted th e n am e lor Itself In th e
T»Hs. w hen its loothall team w as In th e m idst of
live world ch a m p io n sh ip s in sev en years. In­
clu d in g th e lirst tw o S u p er Bowl titles.
S ince th en , n o th in g .
Except lor th e NEC C eu tral c h a m p io n sh ip to
IH72 a n d cam eo a p p e a ra n c e s In th e playolls that
y ear a n d a lte r th e 15)85 strik e sea so n , th e P ackers
h ave drilled aim lessly , losing sin ce Lom bardi
w ith d ep ressin g regularity.
Now. w ith th ree w ins In th e last lour w eeks.
G reen K.iv is s tirrin g a n d th e long-sulleriug Ians
love It. E ach S u n d a y , th e y g a th e r at th e
C an d lestick L ounge to w atch th e P ackers play.
"W e're q u ite u sed lo th e lo sin g ." said Debbie
D alehroux. who o w n s th e bar."W o expeet th em to
will ev erU lm e. We hope th ey 'll will. Hut ..."
Lately, they h ave been. A lter a 2-5 start,
victories over D etroit. P h ilad elp h ia a n d C hicago
h ave m ade N ovem ber a good m o n th lor th e Pack.
U nder it new ad m in istra tio n , th e y 're S-li now.
Ih realeiiln g .500. th e m ark ol m ed io crity th ey 'v e
toppetl lost live l lin es sin ce L om bardi lell tow n.
I he p ro sp erity is nice, a w elcom e ch a n g e from
25 y ea rs ol living In th e p ast, th in k in g of th o se
Hist two S u p e r Howls w hen L o m b ard i's team
t tiled looth.ill
A sign on the h ack ol th e liar til Ihe C an dlestick
o ilers a P ackers Special — S I .75 d rin k s lor a SI
an y tim e th e Pack scores. "It d o e sn 't cost m e a
lo t.’ D alehroux said . "I get oil real c h e a p ."

As Baker Is qifick lo point out.
the transition the G reyhounds
had to m ake front playing for
Coach Scott lo (faying for him
w as eased Immensely by the
efforts of assistant coaches Ja c k
Bloomlngdalc. Reedy Cox and
Ed Znrcmba.
“ I think our smlf us ns good as
anybody else's" said Lawrence.
"L arry 's done an outstanding
Job. no doubt about It."

Larry Baksr

Player---------------C o n tin u e d fro m IB

who Is this y e tr's Sanford Herald Coach of the
Year (see related story).
"It w as a tough decision. Wc had reached a
point w here we had lost three gnm es In n row nnd
wc fell wc needed to do som ething."
W hut B aker and his sta ff did w as limit
W ashington and quarterback Todd Cleveland lo
olfensc nnd moved Dallas Sim pson. Dontc Bell
and LaDaryl Fenncy over to the defensive unit
fulltime.
Led by W ashington, the G reyhounds won their
next four gam es and finished the season 6-4 after
going 3-17 the Insl two seasons. T his m orning,
the ‘H ounds will cap that turnaround by hosting
F r e e d o m High S c ho ol of B e t h l e h e m ,
Pennsylvania. In the annual Rotaiy Bowl.
"Bobby and the rest of the team have done a
fantasltie Job." mid Baker. "My h a t's off lo them .
But we have onem orc to go."

the field except ut halftim e,’'
Baker said. "He w as a two-way performer lip lo
midway through the season.
"B ut affer we went through that stretch where
we lost three games In a row. wc decided lo keep
him on offensive side of the ball so thal he could
be as fresh as possible."
W ashington responded by rushing for 500
yards in his next three gam es, scoring 10
touchdow ns, kicking nine extra points nnd
tossing his touchdow n pass.
Baker adm itted that even In the light of such
extraordinary num bers. It was a difficult decision
to keep W ashington off the field w hen the
G reyhounds were on defense.
"W hen you have the versatility to play us m any
spots as Bobby docs, you cna be hard pressed to
narrow It down to lust one position." said Baker.

w ithout even looking.
Brown litis b een a P ack er lor I I years, drolled
In th e fo u rth ro u n d in IIIH2 from Vltginlo Tech.
No o ne litis been here longer, lie h a s played Hit)
c o n se cu tiv e g a m e s a n d s ta rte d 103 straig h t
n o n -strik e g am es, lie Is th e m odel ol co n sisten cy ,
ev en If Ills lean t isn 't.
"All Ihe losing is very Irtislra lln g ." lie said.
"H ut I keep h o stin g it. no m a ile r w hat. T h a t's
w hat keep s m e going — m y o llilu d c. N othing w ill
c h a n g e ilittl. You co m e into c a m p every y ear
th in k in g . ‘T ills is II. T ills is th e vet it we lo in it
a ro u n d .'
"A n d you know w litil? O ne d a y we will. One
titty, histo ry will rep eal llsell a n d th e P ackers will
win ag a in ."

By HALBOCK

two years (when Lym an was
3-17). Bill Scott w as pluylng a Ini
or young kids and laying the
foundation for llils y ear's leant."
said Lawrence. "Then those kids
becam e seniors and Larry took
over.
"L arry Ims d o ir a good Job of
pulling those pieces together,"

T e a m s are not bad for 25 y e a rs by accident.
T h ey m ust h a v e a co m b in atio n ol sorry droit
ch o ices an d terrib le lock lo b e m ore Ilian 5f&gt;
g am es u n d e r .5 0 0 a n d to win m ore th an eight
g am es in a sea so n |u sl tw ice lo a q u a rte r cen tu ry .
Hud d ru b s. Had luck. T h e P ack ers quality on
both co u n ts.
S tu ll keep s h a p p e n in g lo th is leant. T heir
h istory is full ol w aste d droll p ick s, especially in
Ihe lirst ro u n d w h ere m ista k es tire d ev a sta tin g
" T h e d ru b hits ti lot to do w ith it." said Hall ol
E arner Paul lln rm m g . a c o rn e rs to n e ol th e
c h a m p io n s h ip y e a rs. "In o rd e r to m a in ta in
excellence, you h av e lo tlrtill well. It co m p o u n d s
II you have five or six poor d ro lls, you odd IO
y ea rs lo Ihe reb u ild in g . T h ey 'v e d ia lle d ten llily ."
T h e record su p p o rts llo rm m g . G reen Hay has
Just one p layer, eo riierb aek Vlm ilc Clark, lell
from Its I b ill d raft. T ackle T o n y M andarleh.
d ra tte d No. I lit 15)85). h as been plagued by lu |u ry
a n d illness a n d m ay not ploy ag ain . R un n in g
hack Brent Eullwood. (Im bed No. I In 15)87. is out
ot loot boll. D efensive back Mossy ( ‘title, acq u ired
in ti trad e lor G reen Hay’s No. I in lilHfi. w ound
tip in (all. T ackle Hrucc C lark, d ro lled No. I lit
15)80. optctI in stead to play ill ( 'tiiltido.
"A lirst ro u n d pick sh o u ld be o situ lot H&gt;
y e a rs ." llo rm m g said. "T h e y 'v e d ro lled terribly
S terlin g S h arp e is th e only o ne w h o 's ti lerrlllc
player. Every No. I sh o u ld ire. T h u v should help a

Defensive en d R obert Hrowu sat on th e locker
room bench, slow ly u n w rap p in g tap e. As long its
lie 's been al th is (Mist-game ritu al, lie ca n do It

iftu ti Im m ensely. T h e lr's h a v e n 't.
“ T h ey d ra tte d so poorly a n d th ey got som e hod
b reak s. S econd a n d th ird ro u n d e rs n ever r a m i’
ih ro tig h . S o m etim es, y o u 'v e got to get lucky.
T h ey 'v e n ev er hod one ol th o se. E verybody h as
th e sam e listso l players.
" T h e y 'v e d ro w n ed In inferiority. T hey have
p eo p le s ta r tin g w ho s h o u ld n 't he s ta rlin g .
T h ey 'v e got g u v s s ta rlin g w ho sh o u ld be on
special team s. T h ey went th ree y ea rs w ithout a
lOO-yurd gam e. Hy Occident, som ebody should
goin 1(H) y ard s. T h ey went 28 straig h t q u a rte rs
tin s seaso n w ithout a ru sh in g to u ch d o w n . «llm
T ay lo r a n d I u sed to get 15 o r Hi to u ch d o w n s
each in a 12-gam e season. T h a i's 30 ru sh in g
to u ch d o w n s."
II llo rm m g s o u n d s u p set, he is. And lie is not
alone.
Holt H arlan, p resident a n d c h id ex eeulive
nlliccr ol the P o ckets, hos been in th e o rg a n l/a lion since* 1071. a y ear before T H Ielow n's last
m ini-title. T h e b u rd e n lor losing now la n d s on his
do o rstep .
" ( )or d ra fts h ave not been a s p ro d u ctiv e a s they
sh o u ld have b e e n ." lie said. "T h e sy stem is th ere
lo help. We h ave not tak en a d v a n ta g e ol th e
s y ste m ."
I lotion also believes th e L om bardi d y n asty m ay
hove ca u sed so m e ol the p ro b lem s G reen Hov
ex p erien ced a lte r h e le ll.
"O n e ol th e th in g s tliol h urt w as that L om bardi
w;ts so su eeesslu l a n d we th o u g h t one person
could alw ay s h an d le both |o b s." he sold. "I think
th e GM-eooeh concept h u rl. It w as su eeesslu l
w ith L om bardi. You d o n 't liud m an y L o m bardis."
G reen Hoy tried, lirst w ith Phil H cnglson. a
L om bardi a s s is ta n t, th en w ith Don Devine, th en
w ith ex L om bardi s ta rs Hart S ta rr an d Eorrest
G regg. It n ev e r w orked. "W e w ere late in
iran slo ttilin g lo two people." Ilorlon sold.
T he P oekers linally did In I0H7. h irin g Tom
H ro at/ a n d tak in g th e GM d u tie s aw av Irom
G regg. A year later. G regg lell. succeed ed by
Liiulv Infinite. Last y ear, bo th H ni.il/ a n d Infante
w ere dism issed , replaced by Woll a n d I lolm gren.
"N ow . It's hilly Ron W olf." H arlan sulci. " T h e
leelliig h a s been th at th e ex eeeu liv e co m m ittee

otid board ol d irec to rs m oke loot boll decisions,
flin t's not tru e ."
Thill Wits not alw ay s th e ease. T he P ack ers a re
u n iq u e, it publicly ow ned fran ch ise w ith 4.(327
s h a r e s ol sto ck . 1.8(3(3 s h a re h o ld e rs a n d a
sev en -m em b er E xecutive C o m m ittee th at gov­
e rn s th e corp o ratio n . In 11)71. Devine w as hired
a s g eneral m anager-conch by team president
D om inie OleJnle/itk.
T here w ere som e in tern al Jealousies thal go
w ith it sm all low’ll." Devine said . "I w as O llic's
choice. I told him I w o uldn't ironic th ere u n le ss I
wits th e m iiitilm otis (tick of th e ho ard , all seven
people. I lound out litter It w as live. Tw o o th e rs
w onted som ebody else. T hose tw o hu rt m y team
to tiiiike Ollie look had ."
T he two ho ld o u ts sided w ith ru n n in g hack
■lolui Hmt kingtuti in a c o n tra ct d isp u te, re ­
n e g o tia tin g his deal over D e v in e 's p ro te sts.
"W h en they did llinl. m y d a y s w ere n u m b e re d ."
Devine said. "I was Ihe g en e ral m an ag er. T hey
cut th e legs from u n d er m e."

T hat was not .ill Green Hay did to hltn.
U naccustom ed to losing and upset by his trade
ol live drilli picks. Including consecutive No. 1's
lit H)75 and 11)7(3 for quarterback Jo h n Hadl. the
Ions were in revolt. One disturbed individual even
shot the coach's dog.
S h ak en . Devine left for Notre D am e w here he
won a natio n al ch a m p io n sh ip , bu t he still never
q u ite slietl th e P iiek ersex p erien ce.
"I th in k it co m es dow n to a sm all tow n with
petty jealo u sies." he said. " T h a i w as the com m on
d eiio m en alo r. th e sm all tow n a tm o sp h e re ."
C an all ol tills be rep aired ? W oll's lirst draft —
seven p lay ers m ad e Ihe team — an d th e trad e
thill d eliv ered q u a rte rb a c k H rett Euvrc e n ­
co u rag ed llo ru u n g .
"N ow th e y 'v e got th e m ain in g red ien t, a
q u a rte rb a c k w ho looks like he could he g re a t."
llo rm m g sold. "S h a rp e gives him som eone lo
throw to. T hey need som e ru n n in g backs. T hey
need som e defensive p layers. T h e y 're out there.
Y ou've got to llinl them . Tw o defensive linem en Is
en o u g h . T hey need a third dow n hack, a guy lo
give th e boll to o n thlrd-and-one.

2-DAY TIRE EVENT FRI. &amp; SAT. ONLY!
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perception of spinning or turn­
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to the brain. TMa la aometimea
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refers to vertigo that occurs
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�Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Thursday. November 20, 1992 - TB

p I y « ■v.v

o

Elsie Farley honored on birthday

IN B R I E F
H i t Christmas party

Herald Correspondent

LAKE MARY — The AARP Lake Mary Chapter Christmaa
party and monthly meeting will be held on Dec. 10. noon, at
(he Royal Oaks Restaurant In the Food Lion Shopping Center
located at 345 W. Lake Mary Blvd.. Lake Mary. The coat for the
Christmas party including food and gratuity Is B7.50 per
person. For addltonal Information, phone Ruth Dresser at
322*3760or DcLores Lash at 323-1142.
The chapter meets every third Tuesday at 1. p.m. at the Old
Lake Mary City Hall at 188 N. Country Club Road. Lake Mary.
Meetings are Informative and* last approximately one hour.
Excellent speakers are avatlabk on such subjects as llvlr
rusts. Investments, health reform, etc. Annual
dues are onl 83. Meetings are Dec. 15. Jan. 19. Feb. 16 and
Apr. 16.1

Elsie Farley waa the guest of
honor at a birthday party at
B rim T o w e rs r e c e n tly ,
celebrating her 92nd birthday.
i

LACKLAND AIR FORCE
BASE. San Antonio — Airman
Jeffrey R. Oentes has graduated
from Air Force basic training
Here.
During the six weeks of train*
Ing the airman studied Air Force

Navy Seaman Recruit Kenneth
M. Camus, son of Kenneth A.
Camus of 650 SI. John River
Drive. Sanford, recently com*
pleted basic training at Recruit
T ra in in g C o m m an d . O real
Lakes, III.
» * eye... recn .ll. . . .

training In human relations.
In addition, airmen who com*
pletc basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree
through the Community College
of the Air Force.
He Is t h e . s o n o f R en a
McDonald of 305 Larkwood
Drive. Sanford, and Roland E.
Oentes of 100 Robison St..
Woonsocket.
The airman Is a 1992 graudate
of Seminole High School. San*
ford.

prepare them for

IAN J.TALUCAJf
Navy Seaman Recruit Ian J.
Tallman, son of Fred J . Tallman
and Karen Dagastaro of 124
Longleaf Pine Circle. Sanford,
recently completed basic train*
Ing at Recruit Training Com*
mand. Oreat Lakes, III.
During the cycle, recruits arc
taught general military subjects
designed to prepare them for
rurther*academlc and on the-Job
training In one of the Navy's 85
occupational fields.

^

Farley was bom In Waxahat*
chle. Texas, Nov. 20, 1900, and
grew up .in Amelia. La. She
moved to Sanford in 1960 where
she worked at Yowell's Depart­
ment Store for IS years, and at
Knight's Shoe Store before re­
tiring.
Farley Is a charter member of
the Sanford Business and Pro­
fessional Women's Club and
Pilot Club of Sanford. She waa In
charge of refreshments at the
senior dances at the Clvk Center
for 10 years and worked at the
congregate meal site for 10
years.
Farley la a longtime member of
the First Presbyterian Church of
Sanford, and has been a member
of Beam Towers' kitchen band
for 15 years. Also, she waa the
first tenant to move into Bram
Towers In 1972. Approximately
two years ago she broke her hip
and now gets about with the atd
of a walker.

*
occuPal,ona
Studies Ir
close-order
and first aid.
____
C H IiT O fl
Navy Petty OfTker 3rd Class
Christopher R. Ray. son of J .
Christopher Ray and Terry P.
My husband Is In the military
Manfre. both of Sanford, recently &gt;nd we live in Heidelberg.
returned aboard the destroyer Germany. I read your column In
US3 Conolly. homeported in the Stars and Stripes newspaper.
Norfolk. Va. from a six-month A lew months ago. you had a
deployment to the Northern Red letter about a 18-year-old boy
Sea and Persian Oulf. During the who waa a bedwetter. Hla doctor
deployment. U8S Connoly joined prescribed DDAVP and It cured
the multi-national force, opera!• the boy of bedwetting, which
ing In the north Red Sea and really changed his Ufe.
conducted Us boardings of motor
Well, my daughter who Is 19
vessels enroute to and from the years old still wets the bed In
Oulf of Aqaba In support of spite of alarms, diapers, re­
U nited N atlbns* s a n c tio n s striding fluids, waking her up
against Iraq. Ray visited Athens, a n d w a l k i n g h e r to t h e
G reece: H u rg h a d a . E g y p t: bathroom. We tried everything
Jaball. Saudi Arabia: Bahrain: th e doctors sug g ested , but

Hormone sure cure
for teen bed-wetters
A D V tM

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN
•

Eagles distribute turkeys
Members of the Fraternal Ordtr of t soles , Sanford Asrls, Ladles
Auxiliary, raised funds lo prepara Thanksgiving baskets for the
needy. A turkey was included In each basket. Participating ware
(from left): Barbara McCauley, conductor; Nina Crouae, vioe
president; Martha Gilbert, president; Mary Lou Wordmen, past
president; and Gertruda Ireland, trustee.

2S*■»A,um
onlc**"* JLT*
el Williams,Ovkdo. boy.
8 — Kimberly Barker and
I Bartley. Heathrow, boy:
telyn Hill an d Robert
S^ford.
9 - Amy and Kevin Cain.
d. girl: Soflna Burton and
II Coke Sr.. Altamonte
[s. boy.
*
11 — Esther and Garry
man. Lake Mary, girl:
a e le n e a n d S h aw n
land. Lake Mary. boy.
12 — Tina and Edward
Sanford, boy: Amber and
It Garrity. Oviedo, boy:
erly R an k a n d David
Longwood. boy: Cyn

S
l T - C h iJm L
w in ter SDrinus ^ rlrT q h ^ hi*
ScKaSdo ^ d T o d ^ HsriST A
JJn S L S
rS
^ i^ £ ^ ^ ii£ S 2!*
SST
S inter
U vfe*
w 'nler»Pring.. boy. j
^N ov.^ 15 - K athleen and
Ran&lt;ly Powrl1, Ssnfocd. bay.
Nov. IB — Kelly White and
D aniel H u tso n , A lta m o n te
Springs, boy: Alice and Robert
Koraack. Altamonte Springs,
girt: Roaalyn and Omar Feres,
Altamonte Springs, girt: JuUe
and Curtis Partridge. Sanford,

hormone i k
Mdneys
my
w n n i P™6
• higher I
J*?1 *Uyed 1
Ml night. (T
night.) 8he i
deep sleeper,
Before givi
tkm. the doc
on her to m
nothing phy
her. All hei
normal.
Abby. she
for two mar

W M I Bi I appreciate your
writing. Bed-wetters of all ages
would feel far lesa embarrassed If
they knew how many ."closer
bcd*wettcrs th ere are: Ihey
number in the millions. Trust
me.
DBAS ABSYi 1 know that a
person can have hla nam e
changed kgally If he wants to,
but la It possible to change hla
birth date?
I am 11 years old and my
birthday is Dec. 25. and ever
since I can remember, whenever
I got birthday presents. I waa
lold. "And this la also your
Christmas present."
Abby. I don’t think that's fair,
la there a way I can change my
birthday to sometime in June or
July?
. ____
f p a s y g p yjf f t f s i s m i
DBAS CBBATBOt Not offlclally. Your date of brflh Is on
your birth certificate, which Is
part of your permanent record.
However. tf you want to cek*
brate your birthday on the
Fourth of July, nobody can stop
you.
P.8. Oueen E lisabeth H'a
birthday la In April, but she
celebrates It in June when the
weather is better In London.

vesi You Can
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�- Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thuraday, Novembar 26, 1092

L»gal Notloti

Ltgil Nolle—
VtNICLfAUtTMT
TM* auction will ba hold on
Pacomboc A IMS at B:« a.m.
at Sfat Slats,a Trait ovtoPa.
FI. Prms*diva MOn may
impact vohktao an tha Say
tetora, tram *:*ta.m. until P:te
p.m. Termsare cashareerttftaP
tuns* arty. TWbttt* Mc/Atomo
lamaran Teartnp reaorveo tha
r|jM la accapt ar ra|ari any and
iFt«A«Fi»na
tfWFordP.U. White
IFTCatbMLUAMn
tM7Ford BrancaRed
IPMCUtSTSHJAStm
FuMlah: Navambar Mltfl
oiv-aa
NOTICEOFSALE
TM* Notice at tala la
fumtahoP ta yau pursuant ta tha
at lodtei m ss.
Flarlpa Statutaa.
Vau
ara
B A $R fm
M b $$y
imwy n$nT^q Bm$f
at January, tm at tlte AM. at
A C iW 111« I tK - r EMM
Hiahwoy 17-at. LanawaaP. FlarMa SS7M. tha tetowlnt «t.......... laaWat
(A) tfta Qwvretot Corvette.
10#: IZSTUMIIIT*.
(■) Tha owner at aaMvehicle
la Otabal Crash A Ckmmarae
Cerp./Prltannlca Enhrprlao*.
Lte., wham aPPraat la c/O
RlcharP I. Rablnaan. til
Farn Feb. Flarsa

Rain, rain go away
Evan • day of aunahlna did llttlo to dry tha
ataodlng In tha parking lot at Saminola Canter In
8anford where the water remained several

■
m a Im a B b b a a d
rwpMVTS
8 H IC n $ rV

Inches deep at mld-aftemoon yesterday follow­
ing a night where 10 Inches of rain caused
flooding across the area.

Fetal brain transplants show
promise in Parkinson’s disease
ly fliim i m

AP Science Writer
BOSTON — Three new studies provide the
strongest evidence yet that transplants of brain
tissue taken from aborted fetuses can help
victims-of Parkinson's disease regain control of
their crippled bodies.
The experimental technique, which Injects fetal
tissue into the victims' damaged brains, could
potentially benefit many of the estimated 1
million Americana with the disease.
Victims are afflicted by stiffness, trembling and
slow, shuffling walk. As the disease worsens, they
often have trouble eating, dressing or doing other
ordinary chores.
The new studies are the first major published
reports to show that, for some victims at least, the
transplants can dramatically change their lives.
After the operations, patients gradually found
they could walk without railing, drive cars and
take care of themselves.
The approach la controversial, however. Feder­
al support for It has been banned for the past four
years because of fear It will encourage women to
have abortions, the only major source of tissue
Researchers cautioned that the operation does
not help everyone. Among* their biggest foie—One woman fell so often she could only get
around her house, by crawling. Since the
operation, she walks well and Calls less than once
m an's hands Jerked so bsdly that he
not cat in front or other people because he
involuntarily threw food. After the operation, he
celebrated last Thanksgiving dinner with a dozen
family members. He also got his drivers license
back and drove across the country In a motor
—Another man was house bound and required
constant care by his wife. Now. he drives and
coaches his son's soccer team.
“It's exciting, because the weight of the
evidence suggests Increasingly that this is p
procedure that has a future application in

medicine. But all of the groups are agreed at the
present time that what we are doing is not ready
for wide application. We arc still working out the
details.'* said Dr. D. Eugene Redmond Jr. of Yale
Medical School.
The reports, published in Thursday's New
England Journal of Medicine, were written by
teams that have pioneered the procedure during
the past five years at Yale, the University of
Colorado and University Hospital In Lund,
Sweden.
“ T he m ost ex citin g th in g is th a t th e
transplantation of fetal tissue Into the brains of
Parkinson's patients is making a clinical dif­
ference.*' said Dr. Curt R. Freed of the University
of Colorado.
The operation costs about $30,000, and those
done In the United States were paid for with
private donations or by the patients themselves.
Eight years ago. the Reagan administration
prohibited federal support of research with fetal
tissue. President Bush last year vetoed legislation
that would have ended the ban. President-elect
Clinton has said he favors lifting it.
Parkinson's disease destroys tissue in the brain
that makes the chemical dopamine. Patients can
be treated with the drug levodopa. which eases
symptoms but does not stop the disease.
(n the new approach, tissue taken from aborted
fetuses is Injected Into victims' brains to replace
cells wrecked by the disease. At least 100 such
operations have been performed worldwide. The
results of 13 were reported in the three studies.
The reports “will undoubtedly spur optimism.'*
Dr. Stanley Fahn of Columbia University wrote In
an editorial. Although the results are encourag­
ing. he cautioned that many questions remain,
such as how long the berieflts will last, how much
fetal tissue is needed and where exactly it should
be placed In the brain.
Dr. Hakan
Hak Wldner and others on the Swedish
team found the operation appeared to be
especially Impressive for countering a form of
P arkinson's caused by abuse of MPTP, a
synthetic heroin. They treated two patients, both
afflicted since 1B62. who made dramatic recov­
eries.

Clinton mixed classy, country
for past five inaugural balls

fra

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several swanky balls. They also
will find a way to thank voters
Aaaoclaled Prsss Writer
for the victory.
For Clinton's first inaugural in
LITTLE ROCK - BUI Clinton's
-m other danced barefoot and 1079. Mrs. Clinton wore a dusty
to the band at his rose psnnc yelvet gown modeled
ball, a homey after her wedding dress. “It was
baah w ith a q u ain t them e: my favorite and 1asked her to do
something similar for the Inau­
“Diamonds and Denim."
At his last Inaugural as gover­ gural ball." Clinton aald .at the
;
n o r. C linton a n d b is wife. Umc.
The ball was held a i-a local
Hillary, stood in a reception line
for more than four hours, shak­ armory. Tickets were* $20 a
ing hands with any Arkansas head.
A b an d c a lle d “ D e a le r's
resident who bothered to wait.
The Clintons have conducted C hoice." featuring C linton's
five Inaugural celebrations, all a half-brother Roger, played rock
tasteful mix of folksy, friendly music. Roger Clinton said his
and fancy. Black tie was optional new rock hand “Politics" will
at the balls — most people wore play at one of the presidential
business suits, but a few wore inaugural balls in January.
Folk singer Jim m y Driftwood
Jeans the first year. Clinton
always dressed in a tuxedo, his and gospel group ("Loving sis­
ters" also played for the eclectic
wife a gown.
Clintons.'
Wine - usually Carlo Rossi The day began with a service
washed down the cheese and
crackers. Jazz, gospel and rock at Immanuel Baptist Church ,ln
Little Rock, a tradition that held
were played.
A m ericans can expect the through the 1001 Inaugural.
same mix of class and comfort at Offk-lala say Clinton will cer­
the four-day celebration marking tainly include a church service
the Ja n . 20 Inauguration of In the presidential Inaugural
Clinton aa the 42nd president or celebration.
Clinton was thrown out of
the United States, event orga­
office In 1000 and returned In
nizers say,
“ It will be about being In 1002. making the 1003 inaugu­
touch with the American peo­ ral a special event. More than
ple," Inaugural chairman Ron 6.000 people crammed a Utile
Brown said. “On the other hand, Rock convention center lo.Join
it wtU have the requisite amount the wildest of Clinton's five
of dignity that is becoming of an inaugural balls.
Roast beef sandwiches and
.American president.
. Stealing from the Arkansas baked ham were served to the
the Clintons plan to 2.000 people who attended the
i-ilrkrt ball in 1985. The
one o r two activities de­
C lin to n s m ade th e ir g ran d
entrance on a red carpet.
» mem to _
Clinton wore a three-piece gold
public, some cheap events

lame ensemble that shimmered
In the spotlights.
For the third Inaugural In a
row, Mrs. Clinton wore the
“ Kahn Canary." a 4.25 karat
uncut yellow diamond found at
Arkansas' Crater of Diamonds
S late Park, th e only public
diamond mine In the world.
But. again, comfort and acces­
sibility were keys.
"We're going to have a party!"
Mrs. Clinton said tn announcing
the 1080 ball. “ Wear what you
fed comfortable In. It's strictly
black-Ue optional."
Daughter Chelsea, now 12. has
been a part of every inaugural.
In 1065, she was wide-eyed aa
(he Clintons entered the House
ch am b er for th e governor's
traditional address. “Mommy."
the 4-year-old said. "I think I'm
going to be scared."
His sw earing-in th a t year
prompted Clinton's biggest In­
augural gaffe. He nervously
raising his left hand, instead of
his right, to lake (he oath of
office."
In 1067. 3.000 people broke
into cheers when the Clintons
had (he traditional first dance,
this time to "Moonlight Sere­
nade." The applause turned to a
roar when he switched partners
and finished (he dance with
Chelsea, (hen
G.
t
Balloons were hung In long
arches over the room or rose
from the centerpieces of dozens
of tables. One band played swing
music from the 1940s, another
played hits from the 1050s and
1060s.

I. Rablnaan. tst Orabsn Rood.
PomFork. FloridaSOS.
tCI Thanama anP aPPram at
tha Uttar I* Automotive Accant*. lie.. MS N. Hlphway
17-es. UnpweaP. PtariPa nm
la tori m(0) Uawr damn a Uan an
lea* partarmaP anp atarape
tha turn at SATOZA
plua SIMP par Pay
IfpeiPtoLtorarweutd
fa
---»-*
S $ fa
vehicle ham tha Lien datmeP
by the Lienor.
til TMt It Nance that tha
Llw damns by the Lienor ta
*ub|ect te rrtm m rw tp rm flt
la Flart* Statutaa. 7UJA anp
that the white may ba aatP ta
satiety aaM Lien That tha
mar Uentharaanhaeartpht te
rter ta the
Idataanwta by mmfe
Clerk el the CircuR Cewrt m

vy Mttmggl
Statutaa, MMT7. Any praaaaPa
ffw n nM
m m $ - w s te w
l at the
•a ba«
hap w m rot^dtha&amp; rcm i

*

*

DI?RO?*Nevemter l»rd.
nm.
AUTOMOTIVEACCMtTl.
INC.
ByjOARVR.MASSeT,
Attorney ter Liener
111Whet CHrueStreet
AWamente Sprint* FLSS7U
tawii

DEYJta

INTUBCIRCUITSPURT
OPTNBBIONTEMTM
CIVILCAMNO.

INRl: FORFEITURIoJ TM*
FOLLOWINO DESCRIBED
FtRSONAL FROFBRTV: NM
TOYOTASUPRA. SDOORVIN:
Ta: FtRRVM.CORNB.IA
SSIPSnaatwatar Tret
Maitland. PLSOTt
ty»
ms Tayam Supra. 1
viNijTiMAieuoemi
OCNNB PETERSON. Falk*
v$pfy» rMmi«
through bis aftlcara, In.

. ............

_

_

alar

ten pramrty tsr the pvrpaeo er

Fmsmp p Faababta Caaaa an
It ta Hpnad by the JuPpt and
wBBB ^ B V ^ w

Ltgal Notlogi

Ltgil W oUcf

NonciflF
INTNI CIRCUITCOURT
FICTITIOUSNAMI
INANDFOR '
BiflCB VStMTOByflyWl m$t V
SIMINOLRCOUNTY,
amsnaaaaP m buPnaee at ms
FLORINS
Ruaaatl Cava RP., Oeneva. SamCA
SS
N
O. tS-SMCA-MF
WoBLfWnYi rmfaSi HKBWTH8 FI DCRALN
TIONAL
Fkttttam Name at MATURI MORTOAOi A
A
SSOCIATION, a
TRIIS. anp that I bPanP ta
OfM
Iftd
aw
lsM
^df t C ^ B i 11faftltid
V lIV
T in
IfW I ^
In
t*TW
e . I u i t e i fBW^Pfae
te te s
Florida. m
Plalntltt,
provident at tha Flctltlaua
Name Statute, Ta-WM: ladlan BRYANJ. BOYLEanPMARY
turn. FlertPa Statutaa l*S7.
LOUBOYLE, huabanPanpwito.
WilliamC. SchreePar
anpCHASEMANHATTAN
FuMlah: NovemberSi. lf*J
PERSONALFINANCIAL
DEYSS7
SERVICES, INC. f/k/a
Chaus Manhattan
Financial Service*. Inc,
AMINOBO
ttOTICI OFSALI
NOTICEOFSAtZ
This Natlce at Sale la
fumtthae ta yau
pursuant
le
the
NommH*$B*7 oIven
* - - —- p a a a pp
rvwtivnpiii pz i eBvcngn
fii.w,
pursuant te an OrPar or Final
Flarlpa Statutaa. Yau are
Porectaiure dated
hereby nettflee that en 7th Pay JuPpmart9.atItet.
and entered In
at Janaary. ms at 11:11AM. at Odder
Cam No. *s-f7+CA-l4P at the
Autemettve Accent*. Inc.. SUN. Circuit
(hurt at the CIpMeenth
lr* T I r I M w B M t “ I W '
Orcutt lh and ter SemiPa STM, the wletdnf Pa­ JuPldai
nets
Csmty,
FlorlPe udnrem
tented property ahallbe aaMat
FEDERAL NATIONAL
publtcaeN:
SA0RT0A01 ASSOCIATION, a
(A) 1f 71 MOB. I Of
corparatlan
and
._lllTing
i.*i_tez
|9t erpanbed
tefa
m
V
mM
ini IfBi a4
9f S
IT
(B) The awnar at salt vehicle
United
State
ta
Fiehtltf
and
N Olehel Crash A Ommarca
BRYAN J. BOYLE arp MARY
Carp./Brltannlca Bnbrprlaa*.
LOU BOYLE, huahandanP wtN
LtP., wham aPPraat ta C/0
anp CHASE MANHATTAN
RlcharP S. Rehlnten, ill
FRRIONAL FINANCIAL
Oraham Mad. Fern Fart. Flar
SBRVICfS, INC t/Na Chase
Ma S17M The
cuetamar
wha
M
anhattan Financial Service*.
pan■ln V
te8*PU1C—
■--PtIPVI IWWI«P8B1
T*M
RU Inc.
are defendant*. I nil well te
S. Rahman. N1 Oraham Reap.
FcmPadi Florida SI7SS.
at ha Wed frent Peer of
tC) Thanama anP apprpaa at
Semlrata Ceunty Ceurtheuee
tha Llarar la Automotive Ac­ the
ta
SantaP,
County#
cent*. ire-. aa&lt; n. Hlphway rMafai
Blmlda
teS^wSam
mi lnaie
faz
katua
ne
faiwiin
vnq nfauro
or
17-ft, LatpwaaP. FNrW
ll:N
a.m
anp
t:Si
p.m
en
•a RBI
OecenW* ta. tte the tellewtap
preperty as eat tarth
(0) Llanar damn a Lien an Pe*ertaeP
In aaM OPar ar Final JuPp«
ka* partarmaP anp atarapa
Let 4SS. WINTER BRINOS.
' the turn e m m ».
chtrfti In
UNIT a, accertRna ta the Flat
MSSpar Pay
plua SB
thereat aa warded In Net Peek
m Fapaa M. Fwhik ttacard* at
SemlneNCeunty, Flertd.
$9 SVTT-K1iPTf FO
Dated at lemlwali
County#
Vlmlda
$lr *d|
rlWId
•VI#
by the Ltewr.
MARYANNI MORSE
(I) Tth ta Nettca that the
A*Clerk. Circuit Court
Lien detneP by the Ltanr ta
SemlneNCounty. Florida
BuMnct It $ntpfcinwit synumf
By: Janal. Jaeewtc
te Fieri*
S
tatute.
71SJS.
anp
AsDeputyCtarb
ate
|teufa
man
te
W
O
N
W
w
m
tleBt
tm
,^ M
W
fa FuM
lah: Nauembar if. u. tte
aatlsty aaM Lien. That tha DEY-U7______________
at the
NOTICEOFSALE*
OBLtOATIONFOROCBTS
ta ar Uan therean ha*a irtahtte
Nattca ta hereby Nven. punu. irtotha
*aPPa*aat aataRrfltlna a ant ta Uniterm Cammarclal
Cads,
th a t YOLANDA
V
■ B f a l tf a WiTTl m $
at Wn Orcutt Caurt m FIOUIRAS at SAL'S PIZZA A
PUB, less R. S.R. PM LONGWOOO. FL EM, SEMINOLE
captae*eS tarTpaman^taThear
County. Flarlpa (ar NI7 STORY
tap ta all
AVBNUI. AFT. 7-C BRONX.
■■■■h* awnar at Ns uaMcta NY) will aall the entire hualneae
iaa SAL'S PIZZAA FUR,
aim has a rtpht ta rayar
at MM I. AR. PM
L0N0W000. FL SS7Man No­
vember SS. tte. ta STBVR
w
tX
*
h
w
j*
m
itatan
*p V
tadP
a STALLINO. anp/sr a now cmStatute IPS.PI7. Am prscaaPa partIan to ba termed; that aaM
r(t) bat net aeeumaP
tram tha aata at the uaMcta
Pabt* at aaM aoltalal and
that any cradttar has ten INI
worbtap Pay* ta plus written
WaPwhh the Ctartut Ita Ortwh nattcaat anyPabtate:
WILLIA
MW.FBRNJNOEZ.
a
a
n
*
■
U
m
—
-IP
V
E
B
I#|M
WBB
tns
BB
nV
tB
B*
Ii
FtarMa^tahSaa^mJIKaiT'* **
OrtanPa.
Ftar(PaSM-ltf1.
OATBD: Navamtar tsrp.
pw-sis-mi.
mt.
Thta ttaa wo* tar tha csnaiPAUTOMOTIVRACCBITS.
orattan 4 SIAPSAfa caah A net
INC
proceoP* wtN ba PiaburaaP ta
Ry: OARVB. MASSBY.
aaltarlallan IN) Paysattar drat
publlcalsn. Caplea at all
UtWbdChrua Street
' iat
. _ iFLSBU
MB)I
M
A Or
FuhMhi
Lite
DCV-SS1
OIV-S
IIOTICtOF
FICTITIOUSNAMI
INTUBCIRCUIT09URT
Natlca ta haraby ptuan that I
i ta buPmas at IS*
Ln, CaaaaOarry, FL
INRB: ISTATCOF
tha Fkttttaua Name at
CHARLI IT. McKAY
MOWIT ALL. anp that I tatanp
Secretary el Stele.
NOTICaOP
FlertPa.
ADMINISTRATION
prevision* at the Flctltleue
Tha aPmlnlatratlan at tha
Naina Statute. Ta-Wtt; Section
aetata at CHARLIS t.Mckav.
a sm FlartpaStatute tte.
PacsaaaP. Pita Number
MLMattel
IMPACF. N penptaa ta tha
Circuit Caurt tar Btmlnala
Tetata Oivi
PiY-IW
. ____ at which it
a Ceunty Csrrthauaa.
FICTITIOUSNAPAB
FL SS771. Thename(a)
TvU’IVWPWiteWf fatVfat vuefau |
ilaa) at thaparaanai
rapraaantatlva* anp tha
NarthHUhwsy 17-SS.IN7, Late
aeruenel reareeentett
* hum* atMary. FL SS744, Samlnaie
County. Flarlpa. under tte
ALL BITBRIITBO FIRFldttlaue
Name fa
at VCR LABS.
ahte
tO*n APRMOTIF110 THAT:
BB
^f afafffa
nfam---------*-----96^9
-------teth
lte
zl
ifafffa W
»uuu Ufa BiwutfaV fat
Mala. Tailehaaaaa. Ftarte In
^* M
«te
rz--liite
ESttS fg
fa
B Blflllldd
rmatlfaBB IB
BtTfatim
Bfafafai
at lha paraanal n
To-Wit:
I___■ ____im ip f thta
Caurt are rapdwP teiHe Snk
RalphLaBran Fauta
sb Iact lam wltb tbb Caurt
WITHIN THB LATBR OF
obv-ms
THAI! MONTHSAFTRR THB
WTtCBOF
DATS OF TM« FIRSTFUbLI
FtCTITtOUSNMM
CATION OF THIS NOTI d OR
Ho N haraby than Mat I
THIRTY DATS AFfaR
wpm W M R ^ m f o .
M falffal U W T f t rtefaB
SSftS-tte# Samleal* County,
^
Hie ^lctHt$$i
Name at SOUTHERN CREDIT
MANAGEMENT, and that I
ted name
ea*a*a an sham e espy ft thta tatanp ta ropNte
* rotary at State.
H le eennP umhtn three
Florida, ta
dler the Pate et the Met
Item statute
Te-WM: Sadtan RMt, Flarlpa
WITHIN TNI LATBR OF
TNRBR MONTHSAFfaR THB
OATS OF THB FIRSTFUBLI
CATIONOF THIS NOTICC OR
Mtte
THIRTY OAVS AFfaR THB
OATS OF ISBVICB OF A
COFY OF THIS NOOC8 ON
vrWIfafl OT mi
te

—------- ptem S I

a

e—

.. ze i

__ i

te

d t e lj .

te

k z e ^ te

z lt M z

P h te

|

COUNTYOFfaMIHOLE
NOTICE
AttONttaw Willie L. Brakln,
Martha L. Brakln A Wlllla
Erekln Orllfln ar th
asalpna, tranatara, ar i
ta ifafalA
____*at thei___
A recant Impedtan at tte
v o o ta P llw u n o c c u p ie d s tr u c tu r e

ta unsafe, unsuitable ter oc­
cupancy and P*trtmotet ta the
hootth, tataty and wellawat tte
peneral public. Thta ehudura ta
a health and fire havP due to
maintenance, dttap. ■
" 'Hi
premete* Wlerhp and a
pieceof retupatar Prwauaort.
LOT IP, HARDEN ADO.
SECTION SI, TOWNEIIP 19.
Ranee SI, FLAT BDOK ST.
FAOE 71, PUBLIC fa CORDS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, FL
OIOSFirst Drive)
In accordance with SemlneN
Ceunty Ordinance Number
OS-)*, tte above mentioned
structure I* declared Id be a
puMk iwtaanca and muat te

the property. The demeiUtan
and removal at thta structure
must bapln within thirty (SS)

-a___.a
.|n
Bfyl
BnOte
Iro pzmzi*^
uFnffafaB I.wIt*
irnsn
ninety (N l day* attar receipt at
In SodCn&lt;Sa*in (7) at
County Ordinance Number
*0-IP. In order tar yauta taltaw
tte appeal preca**. I will ba
ni canary tar yau ta appear
before the Beard at County
Commissioner* and |
at ta stay the
mentioned strucfiwo should net
te ded aiod a public nuisance. If
you wish ta appeal ta the Beard
at CamnSsslener*. ptaaao tat ma
know and I will rsavast the
Beard taset a time and data tor
Failure ta bapln rwnevel at
thta structure ar lelkre ta ap­
peal ta the Beard it Commis­
sioners within thirty OS) day*
attar receipt at thta nPka may
result in action betap taken by
the Ceunty ta have thisstructure
costs Incurred by the Camty tar
TnV VMtwIlnift Bftl twffalP P
thta structure will teaweeeedta
spalnetyeur preperty.
It ye

call ARtai Flarao at SSl-ltM
a«tanetan7P7S.
Publish: taevemter It. St A
December S.M. m t OEV-MI
INTHECIRCUITCOURT
OPTMSEtONTCENTN
judicial a tc u rr
INANDFOR
SEMUNOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
case no tu r n o u t*
FIRSTUtaONNATIONAL
SANKOFFLORIDA.
Plaintiff,
Y f,

JOHNS.HAMLET. JR., and
thaunkndwni
daimlnpta
B. HAMLET. JR.I ASH. BY 0.
HAMU.BT a/k/a ASHLEY
WORTH: OEFARTMfadT OF
REVENUE, STATE OF
FLORIDA: SWEETWATER
CLUB HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION. INC.: and
KAREN L HAMLET.
TO: JOHNS. HAM LET JR.

Azg tel zmMmUzlteww
Kffa
eat by. thmuah. under vapobwi
JOHN B HAMLET. JR., and
ether pvtle* dalm lnp by.
Rwpuah.unPar ar aaalnst JOHN
E. HAM LET, j T T and all

aartNa tavlna ar clalmlnp
have any rtpM# tills er Inter
In the artesrty herein &lt;

YOU ABB NOTIP 110 that an
action ta taracleia at
l ambieta County,Ftarte:
Lala S and S. Week B.
SWEETWATER CLUB UNIT A

teptegfaa
■vAPwlfg fa
IBlte
Ufa zlz|
Ptfl tearoi
VfalBBI aa
faV

recorded In Fiat Peek 7*. Fapee
U and IA at Ma FuMk Record*
el SemlneN Ceunty, FlrMe.
tee teen filed easlnei yau
yau ar* tapulrad ta serve a i
atyaursdtttandaSanaaa.lt
ta It an

7,
and
arlaiaal
azIJtf*A
f a f a W f a l MPM
fa flU P t t
I
wim wit ctfafw m iftf nun

In te

ITSDan
I99A
llMARY, _____
ClarkadRoCSrodtCawt
By:CacaiiaV. Btem
PaputsCtark
LOWHOELOi
IC
K
OOSTBR.
KAN
R.KANTORAREED.
PROFESSION:
ASSOCIATION I
OanatdA.Mta*rcJrj
FlertPa Ear Na. Mid
SISNarthBataDrive
T
tN
p
b
aw
K
dS
m. _

tewfafafami
. fawnITl

-------it N
av
am
b
arA
tAIf.M

baarten wRbbt RNaantW Pam damn dth bps caurt WITHIN
gt Mm ygigtat gf Rglgg
■ THAII MONTHSAFTBR TMt
OATS OFTHB FIRST FUBLICATIONIB THISNOTICC.
FILBO faU BB F08SVIR
BARRCO
The Pe*« at the hratpuMkattan at thta Nattca » f

asms.

I HBRBBV CERTIFY that a
• b
yU
J. M
b
it an
p
mk R
ahtmR
scaip
t
P
P
aS
thP*el N
e
-

.... ■■ . I

arsa%!2‘0‘

StSW.Flrat S*raat Sutk
FtadpaM77l

WIU.1AMIB. RIISCtPSANN.
JB*i
FA

ta.tt.SAte
OEY MS

...to Band fbr th a latost
oopy o ftb a fra a
Oonsum ar Inform ation

Coutre

U Uzu noro than
S0 0 flroa or lovr-oofa
|r m r n men^ p ih li« ^ |
o n topsof Uka monsgr,

Circle
Oantaiw.McKm
FadOSRaaBaaM
FtwspsMMSfaM
kM giNlI
CharteTScXey

ggaSy—
’AI
08V SB

_

OEV-M

�Ts

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, November 2fl, 1992

127—Storap/Offic*

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

IMPACT FLORIDA. INC.,
J ARID F. MARTINSZ and
ANDRIAM.MARTINKZ
D IL I, IANFRA L. LOCKE,
individualty and at Tnatee of
Crown Investment Trod and the
Martinet m i Haute Trust,
C H I STIR R. IL L IS O N IU R I
THI NO CLK AN INO tB t VICC,
JOHN W. LOUPFIR, JOANN!
DCVNEY, PAULINI
CHAPMAN. BARBARA
SWANNIR.MICHAIL
MCOLAFLIN, R U D Y
CARPI1IOP W IN TIR PARK.
INC. CARITHA Y. BROWN.
H I LIN A V IR V . CHICAGO
TITLE MMJRANCI
COMPANY. J O Y C IR IIB I,
CHARLBIM. COMIAU.
M AOOaiNACOM IAU,
CHARLS SOOOSKI, H IL I N
tOOOtn. and J AAAIS T.
PAN ICQ at Trustee,
us^WIWi^^lRWesW'*

N O TIC IO P S A U
NOT IC l IS H IR IB Y O IV IN
that pursuant to a FUelJudgment In Feroclessne rendered

bath apt. available. M40/mo
or 1110/wfc. plut OOO security.
Near downtown. Jana, 710-Tit I
NIC* large I bdirn. I bath,
central H/A, wnther/dryer
hook up*. UU/meplM securl
ty. Hall Realty, M l 5774

Orlando - Winter Park
631-9993

OCADUNES
Tuesday feu Friday IS Noon The Day Belem PiAaosdon
Sunday And Monday B:30 PM. Frtdey
A O J U t n U K T O AND C M O ffS i M the event of an m r bi « t

—
J llT*wilu
h

H

W ill

n

I’feto

sedation. Seme electrical
fcnowltdga rs pul red. Must
p a il drug screening test,
valid drivers license required.
Apply In person, i n Interna
tlonal Parkway, Heathrow,
between tAMIPM.
No phono calls
M OV! OP Ta Management)
Restaurant A Retail. Man
egement Jobs. SISK start.
Fat. BBC Mgmnt.aaaggn

All rental and real estate
advertisement! ere subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act,
which makes It Illegal to
advertise any preference* llm*
Italian er discrimination
bated on race, color, religion,
tea. handicap, familial status

W l MANAOI needy an rental
hornet In lemlnole County I
CALL USFMSTI
h o k i a l t y , a t teat

SANFORD • I room efficiency
plut private bath, perfect for 1
person. S7I per week plus Sin
dw sit. Collin » t ________
OARAOI IF P IC IM C Y APT.

105—Duplox-

TrlplBK / Rout

M
g
^
SANFORD, i hdrm, carper
security system, full kit.
m i -qmi discountedMW

l RIOROOM apartments. M7J
and up plut dspesll. Refer-

Ow»ortunH&gt;w

m tm m / m m m f
SANFORD CNAfMBRREaperlonced Sacratary/Assistant le assist In
Chambtr Programs. Some
knowledge ot community ec-

Oov’t Forocloturat. R«
p o t/A ttu m t No Quality
Homesl Owner financing
Seminole, Orange. Volusia.
Senterd lets then tMOO down
OPtnecrest •renovated, carpet,
lances, fenced yd. tat.too
*. ever I/I acre, fenced,
eppl.. garage, treed tat.too
epeel Hemet In cul de sac. V I.
renovated. Oarage ttt.SOO
es/l an *» acre, ino *q It. tplc.
eppl.. dead end street SJS.000

r

Assume No OualtHesI
ei/t an in acral Fenced, culde
sec, dead and street. M4.W0
Additional homes avail. Lest
thenWKdownt

pm m r

C
o
m
fy
.F
ieri

TMTipaaw___________

Unfurn., 1/1, new carpet.
Available Now I t i n month.
a p i . lac.................... tisane

to— ftjw y ty and onty to tfw extant gf tw m l ef than
IntRffon. PfsBaa chMk jiour ad to seei tcy I n toss Bay R

Bar* National

day, Private oftlas SI a day.
Fret Parking. Barter comkl
ered. Call Owner Collect:

A MOV! IN SPBCIAL YOU
WON'T B I L I I V f I Geneva

i
i

PAOLA. Heme on M l acres. 4
bdrm., 1bath, ever 1400 sq. It.
Pasture with stable. II I*.too

75—U ith u ltn rtc t

In The Country! V I brick home
on l/l acre, new paint end
carpet, fenced yard 1/7,100

15—Iptclal NflUctt

I
S

i

323-5176
last A security, m a p s

All ohms, ell ages..... a ft

323-5774

Hiring ad thttH.» SOhrfy,
henefitl.wm tram save

O
V
IB
T
mu
jS
lrk toO
AAjM
pmhum
IIv
H
OT rlHN
TI A
PrNWtolflfl

C
#untyO
rdinance Number

N&lt;U. Ha l l m mantlafta*
Untchira It biclafib H ba a

Dvyctft H i d i i i

outlined In lection Satan (7) el
County Ordinance Number
IS VS. In order ter you to tellew

Im U rU II

CALL

all cenfraders to registered
er certified. Occupational
Licenses are required by We
county and can to earthed by

Ns fab fee Mg/small I
ablet Free eel's. Ml-44

TrnM toyftnfl

rsnrnrrnn
SIDtWALR-Ortvewey Bsgobr
No |ebtee small I

Avn.IAyPlnecatf.KLl

ttM. Handyman Prefects.
Rtsaenable Prices I.... IQ S4S4

"""ICkr”
Quality work, fair price! *4 hr.
eve. Refs. Cell M l-4171

l

DtCR PINOLA'S PAINTINB.
Quality werkt Int/Sat., Lic'd
A Insured. FraaasItM UW

�141

H o m e s fo i

S a le

141

H o m o s lo t

IS /

S o lo

H o m o s

lit I a n \ \N iii;hl

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C A R R IA G E COVE

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residents than any other Japanese import competitor?
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Troopers &amp;Amigos at prices up to $6,000 below the competition?

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Honda

3455 S. ORLANDO DR.
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SANFORD

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f u n r t if iq
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C a sh p ric e s
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to rn or
d e rs L io n e l MO o r N gauge
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tr*.*- sta n d m q M d J e ls on D is
p la y '
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o w n e r 71 000 o r iq m i s tiv e r
T to p s S s p L l 1001)0 9/471

l/ S k r v iU A S

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2 2 3 — M is c e lla n e o u s
• P O T T Y C H A IR

I »• M A W i

B A T F M A N REALTY

k l I 'N ' ( \ K I M l -

M o b ile

Magic Isuzu
HWY

17-92 S A N F O R D

or

322-4382 | 678-2222

3450 W C O L O N IA L D R

323-7244 or
296-4200

Courtesy
Pontiac/Saturn

Aristocrat
Volkswagen

Willett Cadillac
O ldsm obile

U SED C A R S
H W Y 17-92
LO N G W O O D. S A N F O R D

41 7 5 S O R L A N D O D R
SANFO RD

3700 N. Hwy. 17-92
SANFO RD

767-2070 or
323-2123

YOUR GUIDE TO THE SANFORD AREA NEW CAR DEALERSHIPS

321-CARS

322-3391

�Saidoid Herald - Thursday, November 26. 1992 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday. November 26, 1992 - Sanford, F I

1

M f W e've G o n e AH O u t F o r Th e H o lid a ys
FARMERS 2-DAY AFTER THANKSGIVING SALE
SAVE UP TO
fV

HOURS

----- .
tests w

i back

a'm

frpuR

ISSS'

L&amp; SAT.jC___l
l ^ / A N D M O R E ... ^
p ^ O N EVERY FURNITURE
^ DOLLAR YOU SPEND! $14!
t

1 0 -6

^

V

^

Z

-

^

—

SAVE OVER 1/2

ON THISDAYBED
WITH HEARTCARVINCS

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY!
na

COFFEE &amp;
DOUGHNUTS

■Swwd from Opwing Til 10 AM
FRIDAY SHOPS A M

8 PM
M

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DELIVERY IS ALWAYS
F R E E AT FARMERS!
■* t
f r u it w o o d

F IN IS H
C U R IO
Glass shelves, lighted
Interior and mirrored

n n rU E R R E C L IN E S

$*199

ITCHMO
w tr
r*

C O N T E M P O R A R Y 4 -P IE C E
B L A C K LA C Q U E R B E D R O O M
Tins co n tem p o ra ry sty It*
bedr&lt;xim feature^ a mended
mirror ,mil f
11 i.int wiin
marble hiush and f* i\* trim
accent'

4 -P IE C E G R O U P
'ffirif

• FULL/OUEEN SIZE
HEADBOARD
• MIRROR • DRESSER
• NIGHTSTAND

f S S ^ 0 9 v ij
_________________________ .sssaasgra
•yam ^proved CraM Tens I Ptu»i Do Not H&gt;f*t to Fnor Purchat* M tttim in UmrtaJ OianOty 1 Sui*cl To Pnor M i Swing* otl funwn &lt;*■* / select h ^ d j z j . “ 'Struct**} of
pner VpUnca t ardrorac* wdudoO hom •«*. Ml oieUMr a ipwni UK pika_____________________________________________

F A R M E R S F U R N IT U R E
APPLIANCES and ELECTRONICS
2440 S. French Ave., Sanford

Ph. 323-2132

MTHUR. 9 AM •7 PM, FRIDAY 9 AM •8 PM, SATURDAY 9 AM •6 PM

|

�jyertlier - Thuradty. November 26, 1992 - Sanlord, FL

Santa

cdioCiday ^Camoux...

YOU LIVE RENT FREE

KnOW S

&gt;ny

«q

UVE RENT FREE m i 1“M”
2 -1 -9 2

W ithout the hassle and expense.

C a su a lly E le g a n t to
D ro p -d ead Form al!!!

W ltla A

\I

12

&lt;.l M

\

\ &lt; . \ I{ I &gt;l \ s

For the party season
F r o m $00 to $160

20%
20% Off Accessories and Jewelry
Up To 75% OFF Regular Merchandise'
* 2 4 2 8 (3
I'WWII
r i f L f t i ommIZ
tm ia rr
w i.m n ii} iL iU r

Second Generations
Cour t ? Ctuli H A W m pads I h PpplW O r.

3244474

Today’s
Highs.

Custom H oliday D esigns
For Your H om s o r O ffice

Today’s
Lows.
L et U s D e c o ra te Y our
H om e In T im e F o r T h e
H o lid a y s...
Call Eariy F o r Best Selection!

It 'e W h a t 's I n s l d t T h a t C o u n t s

ARMY NAVY
3 2 S -S 7 9 1

(1 T -M A 14th S t.)
k m . 11-4
A lt M

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M

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DECK THE HALLS
With Custom Rugs

Decorate For The Holidays
Ouoronteod delvecy m Sme foe your ports* or famty gatherings
Any S*e, cok* or deOgn.

Wcnhabto Cotton
Rug* - Bath Sat*
Cuitom Auto M att

AERRY

Perfect for those "HerdTo-Buy For* Gifts.

M ANDYSRUG
SHACK
MANN DMS BHOMNO C8NIIII
LANS MAftVBLVD, A HWY. 17-M

1-8009

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Mon.-Fri. 9 AM &gt;3 PM
Nov. 10th-Dec. 16th
r. 26th A 27th)

W___ -

L0MW00D LAKE MARY ..
I4 M * « T

B U I ■ 1 1 1 * 1 ..... . M

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Sanford Herald - Thursday, November 26, 1992 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, November 26, 1992 - Sanford, FL - *

mu ss UP YOUR

HOMI
FOR THF HOLIDAYS!

i*ns*A*
CARPET A.TILE
•OtPranetiAv*.
Sanford
(tMQMIOSlSQ
(4)7)044411 i

ON CARPET &amp; CERAMIC
FLOOR TUB
fkW e ’r t y o u r L o ca C
p C o o rist"

h i, Nov. 27tht 9 - 9 • Sat, Nov. 28thi 9 - 6 • Sun., Nov. 29thi 1
• Mon., Nov. SOtfit 9 - 6

Three-Piece Country
Style living Room Group
Long wearing textured upholstery of
100%olefin offers years of beauty. High
button-tufted backs and round comer pillows for
comfort and ruffled skirting for extra flair!
Indudes 88" sofa, 61" loveseat and chair.
Glider Rocker... $277

WWUKJ Sofa, Loveseat
I l ' 7 r £ r £

&amp; Chair

Or $49 A Month
Nostalgic Rocker
Abeautiful accent for any
room) Constructed of
solid oak and rich oak
veneers with turned
spindles and delicately
embossed design on
double press back.

t,
. .* —
■ . . ja
» •■
uecoraow
rotpoum
r
Our ntEE gift to you for coming to our
Wk. Red A graen potpourri tn this jar makes
It (Tts Dcooty occociooo. rcitjvc csunmon
fragrance. • Adults only • One per customer

Electronic Keyboard
•
•
•
•
•
•

Sophisticated Black
1
Five-Piece Dinette
Black finish dinette Indudes 36" x 6fT
table and four upholstered side chairs.
Contemporary styling suits casual or
formal dining.'

32 mini ike keys
2 note polyphonic . V a
Pre-programmed song
Built-in speaker
™
8 preset instrument sounds
8 preset instrument rhythms

4 Ways To Payt MasterCard
• Visa * HeUig-Meyen Card
• ln-Store Credit- -

Four-Piece Contemporary
Black Lacquer Bedroom
Hot contemponsy styling features black lacquer
finish and brass finish trim. Wood and wood
product construction for durability. Includes 64"
dresser, mirror, 36” cheat and doubletoqueen tire
headboard. Night table... 6119

J u stify Anuoire
Chooae oak or cherry finish! Haa
large mirror, fully lined and
divided compartments and
swingout aides for additional
storage. Closed measures:
151/2" x 101/2" x 31”.

Or $33 A Month

Santa C lu b
C o llectib les

Cherry Finish Cedar Lined Chest
Abeautiful holiday gift item! This cherry
finish chest features cedal lining and
padded bench seat top. A perfect accessory
for your bedroom!

Yoa* Waat AS Six Of

i LANE*

Christmas
Wrapping Paper

Traditional Wall Curio [ )
Diaplty your (ami Club Galecdbias or
otfaf favortw p*ace» to dm I6*x» 1/2*

\/

( ,

19“ “
FREE
Decorative
Potpourri Jar

feilui-J
M) BN

1100 S. French Ave. •
Sanford

(407) 322-7953

H o lid a y H o u rs :
9 AM-9 PM Moo. thru fit
Sat 9 • 6 PM Sun. I PM *S PM

OtfFKE^fttoywMtfBrconkftoour
s*.tedlpenpotpounllnN s|ir
nukes i p * ta tty deooafloa M e
dfiumonfagance'Mriboriy'foe
per customer •Nopmhaenece*iy

�*f

Li

V i

a im

r 'L ® l r * V *

I f *t\1 •) •

•*1
H

H

dazzling row of Diamonds

OUR PRICE $ o o

breathtaking collection of
Diamonds totaling 1/2 Carat,
in 14K

adies Diam ond Cluster
totaling 1 Carat in a contemporary 14K gold twist

OUR PRICE $ C 7 0

OUR PRICK S O O O

c \ delightful butterfly sparkl
with Diamonds

OUR PRICE

$10(

^ii/orgeous diam onds totaling
1/5 Carat

OUR PRICE

HJi rilliant diam onds totaling
3/4 Carat add exquisite beauty
to this 14K design

vL his adorable ring features
diam onds totaling 1/4 Carat,
in 14K

OUR PRICE S O / f l O

OUR PRICE S o n o

ia m o n d s to t a lin g 1/4
C a r a t a d o r n th is h a n d of
1 1k ( io ld

azzle her with Diamonds

INTEREST FREE |
CHARGE ACCOUNTS

OUR PRICE s o o n

ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
A .1iamonds totaling
1/8 Carat accent this
magnificent design

gorgeous arrangem ent of
Brilliant Diam onds totaling
1/10 Carat, in 11K

OUR PRICE

soon

Bused on approved credit, 20% doniity
payment, minimum payment $25

( HIR PRICKS 1 O O

or the Executive, a 1 C l TW
masterpiece set in I4K gold
r% stunning Gray Cathay
Cateye witli Diamonds

Diamond

( )UR PRICE $ 1 Q f

T, ut his initial on this Stylish
Signet
$ 1 Q Q

OUR PRICE v I

mf

2T\ 1/4 Carat Diamond high
lights this unique design in
14K
OUR PRICE S C ^ I

�SPECIAL OFFER!

olitaire Pendants in 14K

OUR I’KK I

olitaire Earrings
in 14K

Diamond Tennis Bracelet
ih v * * IH lI

include

V ' ontemporary
Diamond Bridal Set

tylish G old Nugget and Dia­
mond W ed d in g Bands in 14K,
■I 6 C T T W
OUR PRICE

Matching
Men's Band

*

B05

CLla s s ie Diamond Solitaires set in

Ladles

s 3

3

9

14K Gold

s 9

iamond Bridal Set in I4K
*

2

4

9

9

9

9

n Anniversary Ring she will
cherish forever

1/4 CT
Engagement Ring

OUK PRICE $ O Q Q

Matching Band

azzling 5 Diamond Anniversarv Band in i4K

OURPRICi

v Z his three row Diamond Anni
versary Is a perfect rem inder of
your love, in 14K

OUR PRICE
Jv* azzling Diamond Bridal Set
in 14K G old

nhanec your .Solitaire with
Diamonds set in 14K

OUR PRICE $ I O Q

OUR PRICE $

1on

X \ adiant Diamonds create this
fanciful Diamond Ring Guard,
.28 CT TW , in 14K

OIJK PRICE $/• H O
or that someone special! A
dazzling row of Diamonds set in
14K, 1/4 CT TW

2^1 iamond Bridal Set totaling
1/2 Carat, in 14K Gold

OUR PRICE

l t « . ' I ' l c i M»- p i « c s show n in oui catalog are n'Hy ,1 guide lo&lt; eeleience purposes ol the range of selling [Hict'S in the rnaikel
pt.n v w hen- tins i ritaing
distributed Ham checks will be issued tor out ol slock items W e aie nol lesponsibie loi punting
e m u s Meins are eniaiged to show e ig u s ile detail All diam ond weights are a p p ro n m a le Prices will llocluata with world
diam und and gold m arkets &lt; aral W eight may vary plus or minus 03 carat T G W . Total G e m W eight 1C op yrigh te d styles

OUR PRICE $ 0 / 1 0

W ith F in e je w elry fro m ...

a,v-

M

W illiam Howard's Jewelers
3073 Orlando Drive * Seminole C'enlre • San l o r d • 3 2 1 - 3 1 4 0
Momiav iliroinili Samrdav 1 0 : 0 0 AM - 0 : 0 0 l*M
&gt;1
-~

_______

• -G

____ ________ ____ i___ i_____

�• •

e
• - Sanford Horald - Thursday, November 26. 1992 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, November 26. 1992 - Sanford, FL

wT

G ift Wrap
Ideas

Here are some great ttps
to make your Holiday Gift Wrapping
A Little More Unique

Urn H av a A W ld a Salactton O f I

P a ck a gin g Makartala. &gt;Va
|
Q uarantaa O u r W o r k
A gain st D a m a g a .
W a Sh ip Anywherel
D om estic o r O v a ra a a s. Nothin*
T o o L arga O r T o o Sm all
A ll Paresis Insured. O v a m lg h t
A n d W a a k a n d Service.

Wrap odd-shaped gills with tulle
or tissue— make a pouf ut (lie top.
Weave together contrasting rib­
bons os wrap.
Tie big pinch bows wills twists of
wire covered with ribbon when
wrapping.
Spray lissuc-w rapped packages
with glue or snow, and dust with
confetti or glitter.
Place glittery confetti inside ilic
gift wrap or inside holiday greeting
cards for a special surprise.

e, Get One Free i
3 2 1 -5 6 0 0 (Fax: 321-6408)
k* Oma6Wgarit9!Vi

• Designate till area nr (lie house as a
wrapping Malion. Lay out tape,
scissors and wrapping nialerials.
• Use Teal Iters, sliells and etinfclli.
• Add small hunehes of dried flow­
ers or lieibs lied wilh ribbon.
• Tic packages with husks and fabric
ribbons.
• Secure ends o r packugc with
double-sided tape.
• Use pipe cleaners to secure lags or
bows.

With a little Ingenuity, you can. make
your holiday gifts special for every
k
family member and friend,
/;

SH O P
EARLY
A N D SAVE!

L o cated In S an fo rd on H w y; 17-M b e t w w n
A irp o rt B lvd . A L ik a M ary B lvd .
PERM

PLUS

l|

S a n f o r d 's # 1 S h o p p i n g D e s t i n a t i o n
Penthouse Cleaners
Sanford Dental Centre
Publtx
Eckerd Drugs
A V C O Financial Services
The Hair Cuttery
Cathy's Hallmark Shop
Sally's Beauty Supply
Tip &amp; Toe
Pet Animal Supply
Baskin Robbins
Armed Forces Recruiting

Fs flwOriginal FamilyHaircuttart•

LA K E M A K Y /S A N F O K D

323-9045

uot won mmmonvi owcomb okmtio

a

DESIGNER 1

iFRAMES

f

Men's Den
One $ Depot
Wal-Mart
One Price Clothing
PDQ Mall &amp; More
Shoe Cttv
William Howard's
Jewelers
Simply 8lx
Sergio's
Rent-A-Center
Radio Shack

V

s

Independent D octor o f O ptometry
located n ext door.

No Time For
Laundry This Holiday Season?
"Cleanest Laundromat In Sanford"
63 Machlnsa Including 6 Trfpla Losdart

Monday - rrkUy 9 *m &gt; 6 pin
Saturday 9 «m - S pm
3 2 3 -5 0 0 0

**— ***m— ■—

—Attendant*

*

B Aft.
* a n WGRaPWGB
a GSmw*

W'Mit *
1*190 r*Ht

dOaiui ■ fta

Alwaya On Duly

•Raffinati • Linea Classic &amp; More
All Accessories including ties,
shirts, shoes, etc.

Use Our layaw ay Plan For Christmas

With this Ad
(Excluding Sals
Itams)

�It*
26. II

Sanford Harald - Thuraday, Novambar 26. 1992 - Harald Advartlaar - Thursday,

TimelyCbristmsGifts
Grandfathe
Clocks

m m m

“From Florida” Oft

starting at

! GoodFor Everyone!

$799

All
Clocks
On
Sale
Free Delivery
a nd Set-up
On Grandfather
Clocks

JClockwori^
705 W. SB 4M Longwood • 331-9960
Prices Are Complete Delivery To Most Places,
For Far West, Upper North, Canada, Etc.
You Will Be Advised Of The Difference

I ® ®
•• V-1'1 '■&gt;¥&gt;,
i ;?! •^

Chrijtmu, he or ih e s/ 'tt
dials a local toll-freel, *
number and talks I
j
directly with Santa or
A
Mrs. Claus. Imagine
also the feeling that an
80-year old nursing W
home resident gets; H
knowing that, by i f m
g Santa orMrs.

E

the phone,
child's ....on
Christmas
has a
been mode even more
(pedal

m

MAIM
A00MSS
CITY
MONK

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1 6 th

3
STATS _

TO :
MAMS
Aoonass
errv
J ______________STATS___ a s
•HIP NOW □
•M* Ta Airfca CMsttMt □
OSia, OaSa
Mas

T f a x tt

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 34th
SANTAS HOURSt 3 PM - 5 PM

1

.

- ^

a

a*

U .«(

via

.Im d ,

*Kddvi
\

Greatest SALE In ou r
53 Years of Business!

3©%-4 © * -5 0 *
All Diamonds, Gemstones, Watches,
Cultured Pearls, Gold, Antique
Jewelry, Crystal, Silverplate

Sale Starts
Friday, .
November 20th
through the
end of the year!
»

• •

All Jewelry Repair
Done On Premise.
Featuring Watch Repair &amp;
Designing o f Jewelry.
Ring Sizing &amp; Chain Repair
Same Day Service.
All Mtyor Credit Cards &amp; Layaway

TC advt
112 So. Park Avenue
SANFORD
'

&gt; 9:30-5 Daily-Closed Sat

l)

ns

322-2363

1MHJI .
m iiM i

UadvoSoUtA

j

rm

SanfoaS, n - t
t

�1

• - Sanford

I

t

*

'

Hsrsld - Thursday, Novambar 26, 1992 - Harald Advertiser - Thursday, November 26, 1992 - Sanford, FL

O N I 1 SO

A\ M l M i l l

- &lt; . 11 1 ( I It I I I l&lt; A 1 I S

SS&lt;&gt; V . i l m - O n l y

W E D N E SD A Y
W O M E N S DAY
SHAMPOO,

e tf h O O

1 DAY ONLY - FRI., NOV. 27

10 % - 50% O l
C o flacfiM a Doll*
H O LID A V S A L E
AS Party aad Holiday Dmacs
AORegalAO.W. PantScts
All (Corel Sportswear
AH Joaa Wallers Jumpsuits

MIDDLETON
• ANNETTE HIM8TEADT
• DYNASTY
• LEQACY
a LEE

PsHtm St P re tty/
Slim &amp; S a ssy/
Bigger &amp; B etter

PA G EA N T D R E SSE S

•***»« •M&gt;— i ‘ Lmrp* •I/» Bitm

i n a urn s*.

M a t a r n lt y

3 2 2 -1 0 3 2

• F u m

it u r a

Olrl'a * Doya aimmm 0-14
7000 9. Mtoy. 27-M

A fe a ln S t r e e t S q u a r e

N Y. STYLES NOW IN SANFORD

Mother’s To Be^-'
&amp; Kiddie
Konsienment Plus Men
Plenty o f Clothes For
This H oliday Season

STOP BY AND CHECK US OVD
HOURS:

M-r 10-6

SAT. 10 • 5

i m 339

HEY KIDS!
WIN A
CHRISTMAS
TEDDY

C o n te s t R u le s
1. C ontest Is open to children
ages 3-5 years of age; 6-8 ■
years of age; 9*11 years of age.
2. P aints, w ater color or
crayon m ay be used.
3. E ntries w ill be judged on the
basis of originality and
neatness for each age group.
Decision o fth eju d g sa is Anal.
4. E ntries m ust be m ailed or
brought to th e Sanford H erald
by Dee. 2 1 st
5. Prises will be aw arded
Dec. 23rd.
6. W inners will appear in the
Sanford H erald Dec. 24th.

i

i

i

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                    <text>December

22,

TUESDAY

1992

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports

Arrest:
Child
abuse
Cops: Sleeping tot in truck sold for drug money

Good day for eounty taama

Horald Staff Writar

SANFORD — Seminole county teams came up
with wins in both boys* and girls' basketball and
girls’ soccer tournaments Monday.
M i Pag* I I .

SANFORD — The m other-in-law of a woman
charged w ith ch ild abuse for selling her
husband's pickup truck w ith her sleeping
3-year-old child In It said this m orning the family
wlU not ball the woman out for Christmas.

□Pooplo
Ovar-50 Club elabrataa
Th e O ver-50 Club honors officials at a
Christmas celebration.

A rthur Donald Van Tine 's mother, who shares
custody of the child, said her son had not
changed his m ind regarding ball for his wife,
Cheryl Ann.

I When she’s not using co­
caine, she's a hell of a cook;
she's a hell of a mother. She
cares for the baby more than
anything you can imagine. |
-Arthur Donald Van Tina
"W e've gone through this too m any tim es." she
said, "and anyone who goes her ball w ill have to

A ll they want for Christm as la...
Ranta-Santa contlnuaa
SA N FO R D — Th e Rcnt-a-Santa project Is
continuing. It is being conducted for the 17th
consecutive year by .the Sanford Rotaract Club.
Team s or club members have been set up to
delivery Santa to homes or businesses for
special appearances or parties.
Santa can be rented through this Thursday.
A ll proceeds go to the Thom as Whlgham
educational scholarship fund.
To arrange for a special visit, or for further
information, phone the "Santa Hotline" at
330*0366.

W A S H IN G TO N — Th e nation's economic
output grew at a 3.4 percent annual rate during
the July-Septem ber quarter, the best showing In
nearly four years but not quite as strong as
earlier estimates, the government said today.
Meanwhile. In a good sign for the economy
next year, the Commerce Department said
businesses plan to Increase their Investment
spending on new equipment and buildings by
6.3 percent in 1903. If realised, that would be
the biggest Increase In four years.
Even w ith the deportment's downward re*
vision to its reckoning of the gram domestic
product, the economy in the third quai^er still
deafly accelerating Its recovery (ram the

-

—

-

‘

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-

From staff and wire reports

I

%

HOW CAN l SLEEP WHEN
I PONT KNOW WHAT A
SOSARPLUM is ?

Lake Mary Fire
Department sued
LA K E M ARY - Th e Lake Mary
Fire Department la being sued by a
Sem inole C o u n ty w om an w ho
claims It Is to blame for her injuries
suffered In a collision with a fire
truck.
Elm er and Sheri Gliaaon seek
more than 815,000 from the fire
department as a result of a May 33,
1991 accident.
T h e O llaaons cla im that an
employee of the fire department was
driving a fire truck In a careless and

HOWE '.L

HOWLLL

negligent manner, resulting In the
sccident with Mrs. Ollsson.
As a result, the suit claims that
Mrs. Glisaon suffered bodily inju­
ries, pain and suffering, mental
anguish, and the "loss of capacity
for enjoyment of life." The suit also
claims that the Injuries are perma­
nent.
Maitland attorney John McElyea
Is representing the Ollaaons. He has
asked for a Jury trial on the matter.
McElyea was out of his office and
u n a va ila b le for com m ent th is
morning.

□

A r c h it e c t in c lu d e d
o n p a n e l m u llin g
n e e d fo r 7 th s c h o o l

It had grown a t a seasonally and Inflation*
adjusted 1.5 percent rate in the second quarter
and a a.B percent rate In the first
In advance of today's report
lucres
were expecting the G D P Increase
to hold at last
month's estimate of 3.0 percent or perhaps be
revised down a tick to 3.8 percent
Separately, the department sold insurance
company losses because of hurricanes Andrew
and talk! pushed overall, after-tax corporate
profits down by 4.5 percent In the third quarter
to 8333.3 btllion.
-

answer to us."
Cheryl Ann Van Tine. 35. whose address was
Hated as 701 Upsala Road. Sanford. Is In the John
E. Polk Correctional Facility under 83.000 bond.
"She had no Idea where the baby was," said
sheriff* spokesman George Proechel. "She has a
crack cocaine problem. Apparently, she was
selling the truck for money to obtain crack
cocaine."
Th e buyer in the middle-of-the-nlght transac­
tion over the weekend drove around in the truck
for hours before a family friend recognised the
□8m S a lt, Pago B A

By
Herald 8 laff Writer

Economic output grow

'

30 Cents

B f V M K II
Herald Staff Writer

City Commission eandkfatM Bill Kirch nar, left, and Incumbent Lon
Howell, greeted voter* at the Sanford Civic Center this morning. Poll
workers said voting wee relatively active, considering It we* a on*
candidate election. The run-off election will dookf* who will serve a*
the Diet riot 1 Sanford otty oommlealoner for the next four years. By 8
a m . this morning, 75 person* had ceet their votes, compared to 07
during the first hour In the Dec. 8 city election. The polling place will
be open until 7 pm . this evening.

S A N FO R D — L a rry Strickier,
new ly-elected to the Sem inole
County School Board hasn't been
sitting back quietly waiting to he
told what to do.
He'a been m aking demands of his
fellow hoard members to think
about what they are doing before
they spend money on another high
school.
Strickier has been questioning the
necessity of building a seventh high
school since the foil election cam­
paign and a panel has now been
formed to look Into the matter.
Th e board has put on hold their
plana to build the school on land
they are purchasing on State Road

434 in W inter Springs. Th e com­
mitments have already been made
to purchase the 56-acre piece of
property for 83 m illion, but no
contract has been signed with the
architects at 8 chenkel and Schultx
of Orlando who were ready to begin
designing the new facility.
Th e panel, comprised of repre­
se n ta tive s o f the d is tric t a d ­
ministration. parents, school ad­
m in is tra to rs . a rc h ite c ts , and
Strickler. w ill meet to see if they can
And alternatives to spending an
estimated 850 million to build a
new school.
Th e committee members, who
were appointed b y S u pt. Paul

Balatad Editorial. Paga 4A

Long wood officials spar over flooding complaints
LONGW OOD Complaints by
dtlxena about flooding brought a
wave of criticism
at C ity A d ­
ministrator Jim McFellln Monday
and a heated exchange between him
and Commiasiooer Steve Miller.
Miller said he had brought several
complaints to McFellln, who was

3 shopping
days to Christmas

Tsmps drop for Christmas Day

Partly cloudy with a
high In the upper 70s
to low 80s. W ind
variable 5*10 m ph.

■ le a k s

a ii

basically unresponsive. Miller wss
often applauded by a number of
residents from WUdmere Manor,
who also expressed their disagree­
ments with McFellln.
'A n grily. McFellln said he had
never been In a city where there was
such an adversarial atmosphere.
"You went through seven city
administrators in seven years and I
can see w h y." he said.

Th e issue was touched off by a
letter from several WUdmere Manor
residents requesting help with the
drainage problems in and around
the subdivision. Th e letter stated
flooding in the area was getting
greater every year yet both the city
and county were lackadaisical In
their responses.
After he had presented the Issue
to McFellln. Miller said, the city

adm inistrator told him . among
other things, that "you don't know
how government works."
Miller also criticised McFellln for
paying for three positions out of the
Stormwater drainage fund without
using the employees full-time on
drainage problems.
Miller wanted the commissioner
to eliminate the three positions and
□I

I

The Skybus chartar Inaugurated
eervic* from the Central Florida
Raglonal Airport In Sanford Tuesday
with e 7:30 am . flight to Newark.
Flights to Fort Laudardala will also
be offered by the Fort Lauderdalebaaed company. Until Christmas, the
firm hea lowered rate* to 819 for a
one-way trip to Newark. In January,
Skytoua officials said (hey will add a
second flight Into the Sanford
airport. Skybus officials said they
are optimistic about the success of
their service to and from 8 anford.

S U U S C n i l l E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Cal l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

am

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Worthy

Xrt rtsSbir. turns the page of
MpVOf music teacher Abble
lie W a k e fie ld at th e

. -. (

S T U A R T — A court reporter
whose battle to protect a aource
may aoon be decided by the U.S.
Supreme Court In a cloaely
Watched media caae left h it
newspaper Monday In a dispute
over legal representation.
Ttm Roche, a court reporter In
Martin County for The Stuart
News and the Port St. Lucie
News, resigned after he was told
the newspaper would not allow
him to replace the newspaper's
law Arm that had represented
him for the past two years.
News' officials said Monday.
Roche said last week that
Anne Noble, a former attorney
for the firm, had agreed to take
hla caae without pay.
watched as
a possible major test of whether
freedom of the press allows a
reporter to protect news sources.
A follow-up news story about a
h ig h ly. publicised child abuse,
case landed Roche In trouble in
June 1900. His story reported
how a Judge had finally severed
all parental rights of a mother,
who was convicted of falling to
report abuse in the death of a
child, for which her husband
served a sentence for aggravated
child abuse, and was found
neglecting another.
Though news of the action
circulated widely, Roche quoted
from a sealed court document,
prompting a Judge to demand to
know hla source.
Thomas E. Weber J r ., editor
and president of the News, noted
Monday that Roche says be was
fired, but added the decision to
leave was Roche's.
"H e had a choice.'' Weber
said. "H e could stick with the
(company's law) firm and stay or
go with someone else and be on
Roche. 24. who has worked for
the News for almost four years,
waa called Monday night for
co m m e nt, b u t has m ade a
practice of not talking about the
case and waa not available.
As his colleagues watched.
Roche cleaned out his

•:r 'X&amp;i*

fyfour;
jtm ip win , mwirssssnu m iCDUtA*
tioh for tiJttfesalve news cover-;
age.
His lawyer said Monday he
plans to apply for unemploy­
ment compensation.
“ Four days before Christinas. I
think it's disgraceful." Roche's
attorney. Anne R. Noble, told
Th e St. Petersburg Tim es.
Noble recently moved to St~
Petersburg to join the law firm oC
Rahdert and Anderson, which
represent* the Tim e t.
**U?«»
flK m il a
m rw^rlrvi
r'We aims
are lilftrlntf
talking about
period
of time when this young man.'
who wants to stand up for hla
principles, deserves support and
doea not deserve to be fired fyom
his fob and I think it's disgraced
A
M n K I« saw.
u U
" He
U . w
a a Aaawff
iuili . " nooic
eras
fired
for refusing to fire me as hla
attorney."
Bruce W . Sanford, of the
Washington law firm of Baker &amp;

THE W E A T H E R
•T V V *3 9i .‘If W V

K

Partly cloudy
i the lower SOs.

�8#n(ord Herald, 8anford, Florid* - Tuttday, Dscsmbsr 22, 1W2 - SA

Stop brings arm !
Kenneth Roswald VanCleve, 90, 3917 Princeton, Sanford,
w » am ated by Florida Highway Patrol trooper* Sunday on
Interstate 4. Officers said they saw VanCleve's car speeding on
1-4 near Altamonte Springs, and apprehended him near
Longwood. Following a check of his vehicle, he was charged
with possession of over 30 grams of cannlbis, possession of
cannlus with Intent to distribute, and reckless driving. A
second man In the vehicle, from Lake Mary, was not charged.

( t ( C O &lt; ts }

9 H W 1 p V O p if (n v V I iV n M
Sanford police arrested David Tyrone Qaymon, 38, of
Shenandoah Village, Sanford, at the WalMart P la n , highway
17*02, on Saturday. Police report Qaym on was seen acting
suspiciously b y store employees. Th ey said whan be was
approached by store personnel, Qaym on threatened them and
fled. He was apprehended by police and charged with
aggravated battery.

a

HoCiday
£au&gt;n *

Hardware

I A M B U sJk Ju l SeeSSEdfe

Longwooa tramc stop
Robert Sweat. J r .. 34. 333 Tu rtle Tra il, Lake Mary, was
arrested Friday following a traffic atop on highway 17*03. He
was charged w ith driving w ith a suspended license, unlawful
speed, attached decal not assigned, and no vehicle Insurance.

"

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P

Crash brings m tm I

o

l n

s e

t t l a

Florida Highway patrol troopers arrested Mark Steven
Barbosa, 33, 130 Hasel Blvd., Sanford, following a two car
colllaaton at highway .17*03 and S.R. 410 Friday. Barbosa was
charged with driving under the Influence of alcohol, and
driving with a suspended license.

Warrants sarvtd:
•Carlos Rosario, 33. 301 Collins Drive. Sanford, was
arrested following a traffic stop at 12th Street and Olive Ave.
Saturday. He was wanted on a warrant charging him with
violation of parole, on a conviction of carrying a concealed
weapon.
•Kathryn A . Patterson, 40, of W inter Springs was arrested
by Longwood police Friday, following a traffic stop on Warren
Ave. She was wanted on two warrants charging Her with
obtaining property with a worthless check.
•Retha Lanell Hall, 33,1306 Elliott, Sanford, turned herself
In to Sheriff's deputies Saturday. She was wanted on a warrant
charging her w ith unemployment compensation baud.

D o m e s t ic v to la n c a c a m s :
•Ricky Wayne Berkley. 33, and his brother. Larry Eugene
Berkley were both arrested and charged with battery, domestic
violence. , by Sanford police Sunday. Police said they were
Involved In an altercation at their residence. 3843 Banford
Avenue.
• Tim o th y Eugene Thom as, 33, 3010 M cCarthy Ave,
Sanford, and Dietra Evette W illiam s, 20, *11 Lake Monroe
Terrace, were both charged with aggravated battery, domestic
violence, by Sanford police. Th ey were arrested Sunday,*
following a dispute reported near 313 Poplar Street In Sanford.

Mall Santa charged
w ith fondling girl
M IAM I — A man who played
Santa Claus at a shopping mall
was In custody M onday oil
charges of fondling a 3-year-old
girl who sat on his lap to ask for
presents.
Police said Pablo Oarcia. 33.
confessed after he was arrested
and charged w ith lewd and
lascivious assault on a child. He
waa being held In the Dade
County Ja il on Monday In lieu of
$80,000 bond.
‘ Th e alleged assault occurred
Saturday at Uie Dadeland mall

Santa touching me here?* refer*
ring to her vaginal area. K innebrewsatd.
The gift's rno«h*r ip rf father
went back to confront Oarcia. A
fight nearly broke out between
them, b ut the m ail's Christmas
elf characters Intervened, Kin*
nebrew said.

Sal* (M e t 12/20/92-12/26/92
(Sanford Stow Only)

Klnnebrew.
After her visit w ith Santa
r k iii. the 5*year*old*s "vH h ff
asked her daughter what she
had asked Santa to bring her for
Christmas,
A fte r responding, the g irl

during the burglary, was located outside the home.

InoManta reported to Sanford polio#:
• Tw o VCRs and a lady's watch were reportedly stolen

8unday from the home of Glenda Chltty, 113 Jessamine Ave.

FLO R IO A

•Seven rare comic books, valued at $1,063 were reportedly
stolen Saturday from Oomioa of Central Florida, 3831 8 .
Oriando Drive, owned by Kerry Hicks.

JCPenney

Fro** Row L to R-Kitty Beth Epiacopo,
Rob Moon; Stora Manager,

SALE 21.99
Rag. tM . BOOLE BOY* PANT

2 FOR *39
HUNT CLUB STIRRUP PANT,
REQ. (84 EACH

2 FOR *20

te s w M r"” '"*

BALE 16.99
SAVE WHEN SALE *15
YOU BUY TWO
2 f o r *27
( OH HOMt
2 FOR *15

8ALE21.99

2 FOR *25

JCPenney

Fran Faupel, Fay Elm*, John Wiugb
Back Row Lto R - Don Soucy, Larry Ncleon,
Paul Aubochon, B uy Joaea, Cart Henack, Bert King.
No* Pictured - Joe Copizzi, Hamp Gilbert,
Glenda Silkwood, Ron Swift
Wa look forward to serving you during the
holiday season and throughout the now year.

s

�5c ii

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a j 1&amp;/i*ii y i rk31or i

EDITORIALS

The make-up of the committee selected by
Supt. Paul Hagerty to look at the alternatives
to building a seventh high school In the

Th is time It is Somalia. But the story remains
the same. An African nation tom asunder by
d e ll war and man-made famine. Minions of
dvlltans facing death from either bulleta or
starvation.
A m e rica n forces have descended upon
Mogadishu, bearing food stuffs arid medicines for
a suffering people, and back home there are
vexing questions about Just how for the United
States should go.
... Should our mission end when Somalian bellies
are frill? O r should we stay until the warring
| M the
' ''nde
* of- law
- -restored and a
dans are disarmed,
provisional government established?
If we sim ply dole out (bod to starving Somalia,
but leave unchanged t))e conditions that precipi­
tated the famine in the first place, we really w ill
not help the suffering maaoei
We merely w ill give them &lt;
from ■hardship. As soon ai
Marines leaves the hom of
ting and famine wilt resume.

enterprise.
Somalia should be the teat
Africa Doctrine.
-------:—
M u c h o f tu b *
' a
Sa ha ra A fric a re M
mains as poor today
J
as 30 ye a rs a g o .
. ■
when most of the
n a tio n s w o n i n ■
d e p e n d e n ce fro m
V
their colonial rulefs.
1
If plotted on a graph.

the ^change afafhig-

Thlatlm altla
Somalia But
tb# story
remains ths

for the mass of-Afri­
c a n s . T h e I9 ? 0 a
were s period of t
' w
stagnation , with no Improvements in quality of
life. Th e 1900s actually saw a decline of living
standards, b y as m uch aa 90 percent In nations

I

leading role In dei
and planting the

______ J

such as Somalia.
Thla seeming aberration m ay be explained by
steadily growing m ilitarism in sub-Saharan
Africa. Th e story of the last 80 ye a n on the
continent has been one of d vtl w a n , coup
d’etats. ethnic strife and general political Insta­
bility. Th e coat of such m ilitary destabilisation is
estimated at as m uch as BO percent of grdss
domestic product Carnations such as Somalia.
Aa this la written, d e ll and guerrilla w a n
continue In Chad, Liberia and Sudan (the next
Somalia). W arring (actions in Angola, Moaambique and Ethiopia have set down their amts.
but they cotdd
could resume longstanding hostilities at
any time. Elsewhere In sub-Saharan Africa, such
nations as Zambia, Kenya, Zaire, Gabon and
Ivory Coast appear ripe for conflict. And only the
most hopeful discount a future civil war In South
Africa, when whites eventually cede power to the
Mack majority.
Now that the Cold W ar Is over, the United
States cannot back away from Somalia and other
client states and leave them to fend for
ition to help our
former African allies beat
plowshares,
Th a t la what the U .8 .4ed multination effort In
Somalia should be about.

SARAH

OVERSTREET

the holidays
Christmas has traditionally been the time
of year when we are most exposed to (he
needs of others and generally respond with
em pstby and generosity.
____ m y empathy seems
But thla Christmas
almost froxen. A radio reading of "Th e U tile
Match Q lri" starts to cause Its usual tears,
but 1 feel almost guilty at so m uch emotion
for a piece of Action, and stop.
For months, CNN
ha s b ro u g h t m e
S o m a li c h ild r e n
Mt

.other options before committing the millions
•of dollars it will need to bulk! another high
-school.
i We do not believe that anyone who has a
jvested Interest in building ariew facility will
■be able to look Impartially at all options and
make a valid recommendation to the board.
It would have been better If Bupt. Hagerty
had appointed more parents and community
members, perhapaeven some students, to the
committee. .
:
We believe the school board needs to keep
in mind the composition of the committee

starving tb death in
eery s ile n c e , too
weak even to mewl.
I've watched Bosnian
• adults keen for their
dead and heard their
stories of torture, of
f rcUUyr* ^rded onto
buses ni)d shot ‘o

County

so kindly give to anyone In need,
seasons time o f taking from th e ta
* giving to Ihemadv r s.
overtime. Th e y made a C h ri
the underprivileged children
and were also' able to put
Clothing Store." Th is clothing i
women's, m en's, boy's arid gkva

c b o ic s s f a r sua*
talaahfe devMopm m 1

Parents were catted and:plan
opening of "Santa's c if im ng
were ntven to fomlUea in need,
expected than to have n M any
finished thjm ahoifolng "
UnfortunotrlyTThcse plans all

M
M

9
-■
■
U

■
ii

w o rke rs' ‘w arnings
that winter w ill kill
■*
more people unless. ■ B ut m y
the rest of u s do ■: IfiCm aalng
something.
•bfllty to
M y m ind directs
dstach s ca rts
m y hands to send
m * .B
money to one orgsnlxatlon that feeds the.
starving and another
r-------------------------------that sponsors Th ird W orld children. But m y
heart la largely out of gear. O nly momen­
tarily. from time to time, does It engage and
grab m y throat! A piece of videotape snows a
single, tiny Somali boy lying. In the dirt, his
mouth open in a wordless cry. his legs slowly
trying to kick at the swarm of flies on his
genitals. A radio report brings a small
Croatian boy talking softly, a translator
saying that the only thing he wants for
Christm as Is that nls m other aomebow
restore the -watch stolen from him , a watch
given to him by his father who has Just been
kitted. She could not buy U back even If she
knew where it was: she baa no money, no
H ill m y
tb illlV to dctBotl gcBTci
me. On one hand, I know that If we hadn't

I because gUts for 14. children Were tahpn o u to f her

what was taken
W ith the birth of Christ closing in. I can't I
but wander what C h rist* reaction would be to
uncalled-for thievery. Aa we all know, the syn
of Christ means love and forgiveness to all slnr
Therefore the staff of Wlfeon. and L and m any!
dae should forgive three Christm as grinebea
the action they took lb try and destroy Christ
for many Innocent chikfrm . Everyone,’ afe
always remember though, that Christmas does
mean buying gifts: Chriamas la w ith u a tve ry

‘emotionally affected by theac scenes, yet I
have stored the memory of that honor and I
am strongly Impressed m enially. I'd Ukc to
believe that for emotional survival the brain
transfers the knowledge to a different storage
bln. without a loss of conscience.
Then I pick up a local newspaper and rebd
the man-on-thc-street comment* of people
asked what they think of Operation Restore
Hope. I am stunned to learn that almost all of
them aay we should not be going to Somalia.
Some m y we have problems of our own here
at home and we should be taking care of
Utosct a few talk about how unfair It la to take
s o ld ie rs aW ay from th e ir fa m ilie s at
Christmas.
Th e prude comes up at a business meeting
I attend the next day, and others m y they are
Just m daxed at the laolatfoniam of those
interviewed. One woman wonders if those
would have had the same reaction to
details of N a il atrocities against the Jew s,
had aw been nttfeto rand about them at the
lim e.- Others ask how are caa call ourselves
decent people'and'then eimnd b y and watch
innocent Dcotric b d m lU iv t d . tortured and
kitted b y groups of d iu m just because they
don'tjUw jvdtiun our bdrtfcre.
We tslk.sbout haw m any of our brothers’

W ttu n .

*t B

**

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Loom s to the editor are welcome. A ll letters
miiec be signed, Include the address o f the w riter
sod s daytime telephone number. Letters should
he on a single subject and be as brief as pnsMMr.
Th e fetters are subject to editing.

in te m n r In the buatneaa 6f other aovem*
moats la make sure the tragedies we cure
won't recur, W e tench no definite consensus,
but I am reassured by the namlnn with which

�fcV.
f lT O W r W r

Sanford Htrtld, Sanford, Florid* - Tuesday, Dsosmbsr 22, 1902

S ch o o l

A

M

Wm

"adm onish" the
city administrator.
McPellln fired back that al­
though MUter'a statements were
generally correct they were
"totally out of context" and
designed "specifically to em ­
barrass m e."
McPellln said the city would
have to work w ith the county on
the problems because the county
controls the land where major
work needs to be done.
Mayor Paul Lovcstrand also
questioned w hy three employee
slots were paid for by storm
water funds when the employees

dkl not work hill time on floodIng and drainage problems.
McPellln said those employees
helped other departments when
needed as employees of other
departments helped them If neeIt was not the first time that
McPellln has clashed w ith either
Lovestrand or Miller. There have
been other disagreements at
meetings but this was the most
heated.
Commissioner Fred Pearl said
McPellln was a fine city adm ln ls tra to r. - He said h irin g
McPellln. who has been on the
Job for seven months, was one of

the best decisions made by the
former council.
P e a rl a n d C o m m is s io n e r
H a rv e y S m crllso n said the
commission may want to change
the bookkeeping and accounting
methods In the Storm Water
hind. Such an Issue can be
reviewed at-a later time, they
said.
Although noting a long-term
solution must be worked ‘ out
w ith the county to prevent
further flooding at Wildmere.
commissioners told McPellln lo
send employees to the subdlvlaion
to
do __
all they could to help
_
_____
the drainage problem there,

and a modified school calendar
(year ‘round education).
Hagerty. are O r. Marlon Dailey,
"Before we commit those m ilthe district's assistant superin­
Hons or dollars tb building a new
tendent for Instructional serv­ school that we m ight not really
ices! Darvln Boothe, principal of
need." Strlcklcr said. "I think we
Lake Brantley H igh . School:
should look to see If other
parent Mae Claire Branton; J .
alternatives m ight not make
Thom as Chandler, a vice presi­ more sense."
dent at Schenkel and Schulta:
O ther board m embers, in parent Linds Howell: Carlton
e lu d in g c h a irm a n Je a n n e
Henley, principal otLym an High
Morris, believe that the new
School; W illie H o lt, d istrict
school should be built.
director of middle schools: Diane
" I ’d rather do It now than to
K ra m e r, d la tric t fa c ilitie s , reach the point where we have to
planner: parent Pat Southward'
(tut the students on double
and Stickler.
sessions while we build the
Strlcklcr said he w a r aware
school." Morris said.
that a representative of the
Other district olllclals agree
architectural firm that would
and have said that the new
work on the new school If the
school Is necessary to a cboard chooses to have It built
comodatc present and future
had been assigned to serve on
grow th In eastern Sem inole
the committee, but said he chose
not to oppose the appointment.
" I was s tirrin g ' things up
enough as It was." said Strlckler.
“ I didn't sec any reason to stir
things up even m ore."
V ic e c h a irm a n S a n d y
Robinson said that she sees no
conflict.
"H e will be designing a high
school for us when (the next) one
is built," Robinson said. "So It la
to his advantage to be sitting on
a committee that Is looking at
alternatives."
While Seminole High may be
undercapacity, other schoolsLake Howell and Lyman high
s ch o o ls In p a r t ic u la r ,'a r e
overcrowded. Lake Mary High
School la at capacity.
Still. Strlckler believes that
there are alternatives to building
a new school. Am ong the options
that the committee will consider
are Increasing the capacity of the
six existing schools tb 3.000,
adding a seventh period to the
school day. flexible scheduling

County.
The panel that w ill look at the
alternatives will only meet a few
times between now and the time
they make their presentation to
the board during a work session
on Jan. 14, but Strlcklcr believes
that w ill give them enough time
to be able to look at all the
alternatives and be able to make
a recommendation to the board.
a _____

I f lU f f t ( I I I
.

_
c a a t | i« w I r t « r in iA
Lake Mary Has referred to ease
to Its Insurance carrier, the
Florida League of Cities. A FLC
representative said she could not
comment on the case since It
was pending In the courts,
However, she noted It was a
"simpleaccident"case.

Have A Safe Christinas!
holiday to hare.
W o w ish you a ll

which were not there before the
Incident.

truck, bought It back and re- Van
turned the child to his father.
Th e father called the Seminole
Tl
County sheriff's department and k ™1
had his wife arrested.
"W hen she hits that doggone J w «
stuff. It’s all over." said A rthu r tton
Donald Van Tin e , the woman's
y(
husband. "N othing means any- c , . .
thing. Th at's what that stuff decl
does for yo u."
her
Van Ttne. carrying his son in buv
his arms, attendea his wile's &gt;h(*
Initial court appearance yester-

JA M B S K ,O O W U M O
Jam es K . Cowling. 86. of Eva
Street. Deltona, died Friday. Dee.
18, at his residence. Bom Aug.
23, 1006, In Chicot. A rk., he
moved to Deltona four years ago
frorh Charles To w n , W .Va., he
was appointed to an executive
position by President John P,
Kennedy In the G S A and was a
retired m ilitary commander for
the U .8 . Navy. He served in
several national and overseas
posts during W orld W ar 11.
Mr. Cowling was a member of
A ll Saints. Episcopal Church,
Enterprise and was a comm unicat? for the church. He was past
master of Cham berlain Lodge
•013. A F A A M . Kingsville,
Texas, and of Charles To w n
Lodge *80, the Scottish RUe,
K nights Te m p la r and O siris
Shrine, all of West Virginia. He
was a member of the Military
Order of World Wars, the Na&gt;
tional Sojourners, the Traffic
Club of Washington. D .C .,A m e rlean Legion. Disabled American
Veterans and the National Democratle Party.
: 1 Survivors Include wife, Verna:
; daughters, Zoe C . Jo hn so n ,
Hollywood. Md., Norma Faith
Reid, Deltona; 16 grandchildren
and nine great-grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
i Home. Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.
M A S S L M .D U D M A H
Haset M . D udm an. 97. or
W inged Foot C irc le . W in ter
.Springe, died Monday. Dec. 21,
at W inter Park Memorial Hospital. B o rn Nov. 3, 1695. in
Bowling Green. K y.. she moved
to Central Florida in 1983. She

American Legion.
S u rS o re m c lu d c sons. Kevin
Jo s e p h . La ke M a ry : A id e n
Joseph. J r ., arid Gregory Jo hn .
both o f S a n fo rd : d a u g h te r,
Patricia Ingle, Sanford: brothers,
Edward. Charlton. Mass.. John,
o f M assachusetts, and one
grandchild.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona, in charge of
arrangements,
D O R O TH Y D O T T Y H A R R IS
Dorothy Dotty Harris. 68 . of
1600 Agate Circle. Deltona, died
Saturday. Dec. 10. at Florida
Hospital. Orlando. Bom Aug. 20.
1024, In St. Louis, she moved to
Central Florida In 1070 from San
A n to n io . Te x a s , She was a
homemaker and a Methodist.
Survivors Include husband.
Thom as J .: son, DerrcU Raymer.
Orlando: daughters. Pam Mauer,
Falrvlew Heights. III., Nanette
McLeod. .Collinsville, Ul.. Robin
Kaan, Deltona. Dec Dee Meyer.
A ltam onte S p ring e; brother.
Peter Hanger. Arnold. Mo.: slster, Louise Austin. Maryland: 19
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
Carey hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals, Longwood.
in charge of arrangements.
JO B S F R A N C IS C O L U C IA N O
Jose Francisco Luciano. 70. of
Hayes Lane. Deltona, died 8 atunlay, Dec. 19. at hta residence.
B o r n N o v . 2 3 . 1 9 2 2 . In
M aysgues, P ue rto R ico , he
moved to Deltona IS years ago
from New Jersey. He was a
nursing assistant for the U.8 .
Government for 17 ye a n and a
Catholic. M r. Luciano was an

The Van Tines have separated
several times because of her
drug problems, the husband
said. She was hospitalised for
drug treatment a year ago.
When his wife isn’t using
cocaine, she's an Ideal' parent,
her husband said.
"T h e re ca n ’t be a better
m other than h e r," he said.
"She's a heU of a cook; she a a
hell of «&lt;mc*her. She put s for
the baby more than ynytfrlpg
you can im agine."
t ■ - •

Springs: paternal grandparents. S. Sunland Drive, Sanford, died
Mr. and Mrs. 'A nthony, Alta- Saturday, Dec. 10. at his realm o n t e S p r i n g s : m a t e r n a l dence. Bom May 12, IS IS . In
grandparents, M r. and M rs. Cincinnati, he moved to Central
Thom as Burchnell, W inter Park.
Florida in 1004. He was a diesel
B d td w ln -F a trc h lld F u n e ra l truck mechanic and a Baptist.
Home. Forest City. In charge of Mr. Rottlnghaus was an Arm y
arrangements.
veteran of W orld W ar U.
J O — 6 T B VB R M 0 0 R B m
Survivors Include sons. CllfJo h n Steven Moore 111. 36. * ford J r .. Tlm oU iy. both of O r1043 B ra n ch wood D riv e .
J*ndo. R onald. Caaselberry,
Apopka, died Saturday. Dec. 10 . O ary, Banford: daughter. Debra
in W inter Springs. Bom Dec. 31. Jeflords. Sanford: brother. Ted.

Phyllis Dolores Neabltt. 43. Puerto Rico.
470 8 . Pin Oak Place. Longwood. Minnesota. Ren
died Friday. Dec. 18. at Florida S p r i n g s : ala
Hospital. Altam onte 8 prings. Pascuala, Roar
Bom Jun e 4.1947. in New York. Puerto Rico; bn
she moved to Central Florida in to, Petra. Franc
1999. She was a regional ad- Rico; 17 grandd
mlnlstrator for the ob-gyn deB a ld w in -F a i
partment for Down State Medical Home. Ooldenr
Center at New York State Uni- arrangements,
ve rsify. M rs. NesbHt was a
member of the Faculty Club or p :
lhe University of Rochester. H
ASPA and the Toastmasters.
B h e .ls s u rv iv e d by her . ‘^ M * * * * ^ husband, Douglas J .
lm 2 T m . w s m s
Beacon Cremation Service of ssSs w ti m n

maintenance ■&gt;;.
TU N E -U P
1 ^ ^
•2 2 . i U S 0 . i y S 6 . f t
^ y ssS4««|Msr.

la m o n t e

1978, She was a retired mine's
aide and a member of the First
Baptist Church of Markham

uraisdwra*7sm

B a ld w ln -F a lrc b tld F u n e ra l
Home. Oaklawn Park' Chapel,
Lake M ary. In
of i r -

at* n . w usSn
I smssv . *w u w

,

1

�E E | R iE E E E L P !E $ P S P IiP E IiP E $ P P P P P P P P R P P P E R P ^ it | S F S W ^ W E $ $ P P P !E 3 IR !S n R a M iB ^

-GA - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, December 22, 1002

Legal Notices
______________ ___
'
■
*

*

&amp; M arie's MairstuCing

Legal Notlcaa

**

UATIPEAB ABB! IPATIAM

r

O FTH EtlO H TIEN TH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND POM
ttM INO LI COUNTY.
FLORIDA.

SPECIALS

Add Wave
Frosting
I Cut k Blow Dry

C A IIN O . W-4W-CA14-F
D ESTIN Y SPRINGS
'CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC..
• not for protit Florid!
xorporatlon,

Business Review

&amp;

^

Prepered By tfte Advertlektfl Dept, of the

*27- I
*22* \
•8P I

Sanford Herald

V Kid* 124UndrrCartfrtaCurts'32" J

M UST HAVB COUPON
3610 SANFORD AVE. • SANFORD • 323-5227

MARION ASSOCIATES. INC.,*
Florida corporation, atal..
Defendant*.
NOTICE O F SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that on January I*. IffJa l 11:00
a.m. at tha Watl Front Door of
fta CourttauM In SEMINOLE
County, at Sanlord, Florida. tt»
und«r»lgn*d Clarfc will Offar lor
tala tha following datcrlbad raal

1M

322-2611

Explr*ri572ff7«---------------------------

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
TonS m m a

AOVCRTISIMO

C H E C K CA S HI N G

^ T H A T - C E R T A IN CONDO­
MINIUM PARCEL KNOWN AS
UNIT 4IE. O ES TIN Y
SPRINGS. A CONDOMINIUM.
AND AN UNDIVIDED J04M0
IN T E R E S T IN T H E LAND.
COMMON E L E M E N TS AND
CO M M O N E X P E N S E S A P ­
PURTEN AN T T O SAID UN IT.
ALL IN ACCORDANCE WITH
AND SUBJECT TO T H E COV­
ENANTS. CONDITIONS. R E­
STR IC TIO N S. TE R M S AND
O THER PROVISIONS O F THE
DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM OF OEST INY
SPRINGS. A CONDOMINIUM.
AS RECORDED IN O.R. BOOK
1 1 ) 7 , P A O E 1 S t S , AS
AM ENDED IN O.R. BOOK U4A
P A G E 1*47. A L L O F T H E
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
N O LE C O U N T Y . FL O R ID A
AND W ITH TH E FOLLOWING
S T R E E T A D D R E S S : *10 C
.AKE DESTINY DRIVE, AL­
TAMONTE SPRINOS. FLOR­
IDA.
•ogattwr with all itrwctvraa.

FOR THE HOLIDAYS! PW

FREE N A IL ART ^
res w
w ith
m irrh a a p inf
One naH free
ith purchase
of \ \
a fall set o f artificial n a llt
M

FULL SET $ 3 0
(th ru D ecem ber 3 1 )
704A Wsat Stats Road 434 • Longwood j

FLORIDA RV SALES &amp; SERVICE

Get That Holiday Glow At Illusions Hair Design

LOOKING FOR ME?
KELLY MORGAN
N tw O m m O f
HAlKDOtONA
TAJiHtNO CtfTTXM

You can put that summer glow in your face or
give It to someone aa a Christmas gift this season
with a gift certificate Cor one year of unlimited
tanning at 01unions Hair Design and Tanning
Center.
muskma Is the "new Idd on the block*, having
Just opened months ago at 2435 8 . French Ave.,
Sanford (17*93 in the Sobtk Building). But owner
Kelly Morgan ia no stranger to 8anfbrd, having
been born and raised here. She has thirteen years
experience in the field of cosmetology.
Ulualona offers a variety , of services for your
personal hair care needs. Specialising in cuts,
clipper cuts, color and highlighting, they also
offer nail care services, such as acrylic nails, tips

ASK U8 ABOUT OUR

Plan Now For Spring
or Summer Wedding

DeputyOar*

PvfiSt: DaaawWar t t S»,

Last Minute

BRIDAL CLEARANCE J
m

m

with overlay, manicures and pedicures. Kelly
takes pride in that personal touch. She only offers
the finest hair care products. Maxtrtx and RedKen.
For the holidays, Illusions is offering Matrix.
RedKen and Tressa perms for 930 and up.
Illusions Hair Desimi and Tanning Center is
open M-Bat. 9 AM •7 PM early morning and late
evening appointment available.
Call t t I&lt;€0BS for more Information or to make
an appointment.
The unlimited tanning for one year offer is
limited to the first fifteen people who respond to
this Business Review story. Illusions la also offer­
ing a 99# one-time trial offer and one month
unlimited tanning for 940.

Good Setocbon
Ftm Gift Wrapping

All gowns

$150
Tu e s - S a t 10:30 • 0 :3 0
BIB W. Bay Ave. •Longwood
I Historic Diet. 339*0213

Christmas Sale

W* 5 9 "
tiio .00

™

m

.htaiethiw O R g lilO -M OFM

U N il

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
FLORIDA
CASE Mil M-Mtf-CAMK,
CHRISTIAN SCHUSTER,
«m lM TAM and GUNTHER
KURTSCHUSTBR.

waWtSSSM

^ ■ r if a f e g M y

Plaintiff,

LEO WILLIAMS and
OLLII MAE WILLIAMS,

THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, December 22, 1002 - TA

Business Review

Laqal Nolle#

LOVELAND'S REFINISHING
Can Turn Your Old Furniture
^Intojiornething Brand Newl

1

( 0

S lS T * '

322-2611 %ml

NOTICE FOR
ADMINISTRATION
The admlnldraten el He
I Ha*. .4 OFAL JOSEPHINE
W IL L IS , e . e . i i . S , Cat*
Numbtr: IM TfCF, ta pwwtng
In th. Circuit Court ef SamInal.
, FlarMa, Fratili Otvt»
• addrm«of whkftlt: Spl

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
U M lI iU

J j J

J j J

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THR RISMTRRNTH
JU04CIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SIMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
FSOBATI DIVItlON
CASK NUMtIRi tten-CF
IN R I: ESTATE OF:
ORAL JOSIRHINE WILLIS.

Jj J

irfO; iT jK irfOL

FlarMa am.
Tie nama and addrm at tha
Famnal Rermentaflve and

Here's ho-ho-ho-ping
your Chriitmos
is greot.

■T^wI^FBBv BBTVBrm^ewff•.

All

required la fie with Sri* Caw*
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE! (U all ctatnw
aealnaf Re Ettoto and (11 any
eb|.ctlen by an Intaratlee
p w N n to wham natlca wa.
mated Ihet chaHaneae Re velWel Re Will. I‘
“
“

ft
er lurUdkHan •* the
Ceurt.
CLAIMS ANO ORJICNOT SO FILED WILL
El FOREVER BARRED.

i eMMa Naltoe haa
baamanOacembarR, m i.
DONALD RAV WILLIS
CARMINIM. ERAVO,
CEOUIRC
WSTWertStotoReadas*,
Suit, m
Laneweed, FiwMaN m

tan na-MMFan tan m -na

FerMaBarlto.: ttNM
FuMMi: OacamtarSt l». h a
DEX-tM

Holiday GlftiihNB Dancer's Depot
ftrd U c m * n M M * s

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-G R AN D OPENING KG'S RESTAURANT

"The Best Bar-B-Que In Florida"
introducing
JUDY

people aamplcd the "best B B Q tn Florida". The BBQ
Rib Ranch haa been the only Sanford restaurant to
participate tn the Taste of Lake M aiy since It
started.
During this holiday season, Tttah and the staffof
Trtsh's second employee. The first, Miss Miriam.
the B B Q Rib Ranch would like to take the time to
rtMhflftifm■iimtowtui muff theWlh say
hoar much they appreciate their customers.
Ranch.
;
Trtsh's husband la a self proclaimed B B Q eon* "They arc the best people tn the world." The empha»
notsseur and he didn't think anyone had B B O to els at the Rib Ranch, because It Is family owned. Is
a fiMndy&gt;ortented atmosphere. From manager Dottle
w tff h if challenge. So Trtsh decided to open
BBO R * Ranch in September lfifil. fib does hubby KeUog. waltreeecs NltaRamer and Kathy Morrison,
think it's the beet? YTMNK, YOtNKl There are also
plentyof people In the Gentsal fU rk la area that
agree w tth h im .'Th e re ts eten a*«ewty farmed
to show how m uch they care about their custom*
era.
The BB Q Rib Ranch la open 11:00 AM to 0:00 PM
Sunday through Thursday and 11:00 AM to 9:00
PM on Friday. The Rib Ranch Is located at 8S45
South French Avenue. If you are not sure Just
where that la. head north or south on Highway 17*
92, depending on what direction you're coming
from, and rod down your window and Inhale until
you am dl that heavenly aroma of wood smoke. If
that doasntgrt you there, call 321*0090 tor three*

■CLOUT,

IHMDOft
OOMOmON

Norms

21"

deed With Judy Onty

m iL H a x M iM .
»&gt; E h 8

______

WFDNFSDAY ISSllll
FAMILYDAY IN SANFORD
Carridg
Lower Than
"Elf" Prices
MM2MIW2T. ♦ W W W
e s s n iis a a n n a u
f l B

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HOLIDAY’ SPECIAL

84 Chevy S-tO
87 VW Sdrocco
90 P o s t (000 LE
•5 Ply. O u te r
84TbyoteLE Van
87 Chevy Celebrity
88QkU Flreasa
84 Caddy Seville
87 Firebird
86 Colt Vlste Vsa

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Tuesday, December 22, 1002
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3 3 M A JU tti£

A Drunk Driver Ibok Her
Life Away At Age 8 .
(•A gain Sept* 88* 1981
fay a female drunk driver
A returned home to Ood on
Memorial D«y, 1991
at 10:42 p.m.
She Was Only 181

or Club

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LAKE MARY
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Drink 6k Drive

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We Want

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Sports
BRIEF

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Ajp

LOCALLY
Grambling, Northeastern win
OKI.ANDO — Kenny Sykes snirrd 27 pnlnls to
lead Grambling Stair to an 85-81 win Monday
ovrr (Vntral Florida to tin* lirst round of Ihc
CVntral Florida (Massif.
In iIk *earlier game Monday. Northeastern heal
MeNeese Stale 78-72.
Northeastern will now lace Grumbling Stale
(4-3) in the ehainplonshlp 1*01110 Tuesday.
Kay Carter and Victor Saxton each scored IK
points for Central Florida (3-4).
In the opener. Latnoni Hough scored 17 points
In lead Northeastern (•!•11to victory.
Melvin Johnson paeetl MeNeese Slide (2-1)
with 22 points and I I rebounds.

AROUND THE STATE
Barry routs Lynchburg
MIAMI SMOKES - Anlhel I licks scored 22
points, grabbed live rebounds and had lour
a s s i s t s to lead Harry to a lopsided H(i-17 victory
over Lynchburg Monday iil^ht.
Anthony Cummings led Lynchburg with IK
points and nine relxuinds.

AROUND THE REGION
FIU trims Radford
SAN JU A N . Puerto Kieo — Malcolm Nicholas
and Mall Telilr eoniblned for eight straight
points midway llirough the second hall to lead
Floridii I n t e r n . itlonal to a 6K-65 eoine-lrombehind win over Kadlbrd University (hiring
second-day action Monday at the San Joan
Shootout.

Miss. Valley upsets USF
HIKMINtiHAM. Ala. — Alphonso Ford scored
JK points to lead Mississippi Valley Slate to an
85-81 upset win over South Floridii In the lirst
round ol the UAH Invitational on Monday.
Jesse Salters led the Hulls with 30 points and
IO rebounds.
Mississippi Valley plays Alahama-Hirmfugham
in the championship game Tuesday night.
Earlier Monday, the host Blazers posted a U7-6H
win over Nleholls State, which will meet South
Florida In the consolation Koine.

AROUND THE NATION
UM-KC bests Florida Tech
KANSAS C IT Y . Mo. - Tony Dumas scored 21
points as Mlssnnrl-Knnsns City defeated cold­
shooting Florida Tech of NCAA Division II 68-55
Monday night.
Peter Walcott scored 12 points to lead Florida
Tech and teammates Sherman Hamilton and
Victor Odnmn each added I 1.

Jordan rallies Bulls by Heat
CH ICAGO — Michael Jordan, held to three
points In the first three periods, scored 15 In the
fourth quarter when the Hulls rallied from a
15-point deficit to defeat the Miami Heat 86-82
Monday night.
Jordan niipsed all 10 of his shots in the lirst
three quartets its the Hulls went Into the final 12
minutes trailing 71-56. Hut they outseored the
Ileal 30-11 in the fourth quarter.

WHAT’S HAPPENING
Boys’ Basketball
Central Florida Classic: at Oviedo High School
— Winter Park vs. Titusville, 4 p.m.; Edgewater
vs. Moore County (Tenn.), 5:30 p.m.; South Dade
vs. Gainsville P.K. Yonge, 7 p.m.; Largo vs. Lake
Brantley. 8:30 p.m.; at Seminole Community
College — University vs. Oviedo. 6 p.m.; Daytona
Bcach-Scabreeze vs. Seminole. 7:30 p.m.

Girls 1 Basketball
. Ocala-Forest Lady Cat Tournament: Lyman vs.
Keystone Heights, 6 p.m.

Boys’ Soccer
Melbourne at Lyman. Junior varsity at 5:30
p.m. with varsity to follow.

Girls’ Soccer
Flagler-Palm Coast Tournament: Seminole vs.
Mainland Flagler Palm Coast winner, 6 p.m.
Burger King Classic at Lake Mary High School
— Tampa Berkley Prep vs. Lake Howell, 1 p.m.j
Winter Park vs. Fort Lauderdalo-St. Thomas
Aquinas, 4 p.m.; Lake Brantley vs. Lake Mary, 6
p.m.; Lyman vs. Daytona Beach-Seabreoze, 8
p m.

B

County teams shine
David vs. Goliath in King finals
From Staff Reporte
LA K E MARY — This year's championship game of
the Burger King Classic girls' soccer tournament has an
Interesting twist.
In one corner, we have the Lyman Greyhounds,
winners of -16 consecutive games, two consecutive
Class -I A stale championships and champions of Hie the
Iasi two Burger King Classics. In the other corner, we
have the Daytona Beacli-Scabrceze Snndcrahs. who
have been playing girls' soccer for Just three years.
The two meet 8 p.m. tonight at Lake Mary High
School's Don T . Reynolds Stadium.
"T h is Is a good opportunity for us." said Lyman
coach Gary Harnett, "it's always good lo see different
teams thai show von something different, that play a
different style. That makes us adjust, which Is very
good for us in the long run.
“ While very’ few learns play the way Seabreeze does,
we have to make the adjustments mentally to meet the
challenge. And If we get used In making adjustments. If
we can make adjustments to meet Hits challenge
successfully. then we can make adjustments lo meet
other challenges down Ihc road."
Harnett said Dial Seabreeze's style of playing
combinations with short passes will lest Lyman's
patience on defense.
"Th e y play combinations, a short-passing game with
some people who can score some goals." Harnett
explained. "It should make for an Interesting game.

SUN. Utah Jazz at Orlando

M a g ic . ( I J

Complete listings on Pege2E

□ S e e Burger King, Page 2B

Burks
leads
Tribe
From Staff Reports
FLAG LER — Showing both
Ihc abllllv lo strike early ami
(lie fortIIlicit* 10 protect a lead,
the Seminole Flgbllug Seminoles bung lor a 4-2 win over
Gainesville In 1 lit- Flagler-Palm
Coast girls' soccer tourna­
ment.
Seminole. 6 --I-I. advances in
lonlglil's semifinal game al 6
p.m. agalnsl the winner of
M o
n d
a y
'
s
Malnland/Flagler-Palm Coast
game.
The championship game Is

See Tribe, Page 2B

Lions
stay
alive
From Staff Rsports
OVIEDO I losi Oviedo saved
some fare for Seminole county In
I lie Central Florida Classic as tile
Lions became the only remaining
enmity live h it in I lie Oviedo lltgli
School hall ol Hie bracket.
Tile Lions gul nil In a Iasi start ill
ilicir consolation bracket game bill
bad in bold nil a determined
comeback effort by Lake Unwell In
posting a 48-42 triumph over the
Silver Hawks.
Bill Lake Mary was nol as suc­
cessful In its survival conlesl as ii
got nil In a thoroughly lousy start
and never really recovered In gel­
ling bashed bv University 60-30.
The Rains were held In two (minis
in (lie opening stanza and only 11
points In the opening half.
In winners' bracket action Mon­
d a y n t g lil. S o u III Dade and
Gainesvllle-P.K. Yonge advanced lo
the semifinals with high scoring
victories. Suuili Dade hammered
W inter Park 73-43. while P.K.
Yonge niilscorcd Titusville 73-66.
In games played al Seminole
C o m m u n ity College. Seabreeze
eliminated Lyman -18 -16 and Semi­
note nipped Smart-Marlin Cminly
63-61 in consolation games and
Largo clobbered Edgewaler 87-70
and Lake Brantley trimmed Moore
County. To . 54-18.
There will he four games played al
Oviedo High Seliuul today, with
Wilder Park challenging Titusville
al 4 p.m. and Edgewaler taking nil
Moore County al 5:30 p.m. with Ihc
winners advancing In lhe lillli place
game Wednesday. Al 7 p.111.. I he
lirsi winners' bracket game will pit
Soulli Dade agalnsl P.K. Yonge al 7
p.m. and Largo and Lake Brantley
hallllngal 8:30 p.m.
The losers will play In Hie (bird
place game al 5.30 p.m. Wednesday
with the winners squaring oil In ihc
championship game al 7 p.m.
In Monday's play. Oviedo Jumped
nut lo a 2*0-6 lead alter tlie lirsi
period, only lo have Lake Howell
slarl nipping away al llic lead and
gelling wllhln 40-38 alter the third

S ee O viedo, Page 2B

M ra M

Junior forward Deon Daniels (right) goes up to score
over a Martin County defender Monday night as
Seminole nipped the Tigers 63-61. Daniels was the

Pbotoby Ken|e Zebulungl

second leading scorer for Sanford with 16 points. He
also had a huge hand In helping Arrow Force One
dominate the backboards.

Patriots reach semifinals
C E N TR A L F LO R ID A CLASSIC
•1 S E M IN O LE C O M M U N ITY C O LL E O E
CONSOLATION R R A C K ET
S E A B R E E Z E 44. L Y M A N 44

By DEAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
SANFORD — Charity may begin at home, but the
Lake Brantley hoys' basketball team took advantage of
some "free" points lo earn a spot in the semifinals of
the Central Florida Classic.
The Patriots till 10 of 15 free throws In the fourth
quarter to hold olT Moore County. Tennessee. 54-48.
Monday night al Seminole Community College's Health
and Physical Education Center and earn a spot opposite
Largo in the 8:30 p.111. semifinal at Oviedo High School.
Adrian Lazar paced the Patriots with 16 points, while
Erie Skcllon added 14.
In other games al SCC. Seminole figured out a way lo
shake off the second half scoring blues...get a big
enough lead In the first so thut your opponents can't
come back. Arrow Force One took a 39-23 lead early 111
llie third period, hut needed a pulr of clutch free throws
by Ronnie McCurrcll late In the game lo hold off
Sluart-Martln County 63-61.
The win was a sweet one for new Seminole head
□ S e e SCC, P a g e 2B

Lyman (44)
Ball 10 14. Nugyen 1 00 2 . Cleveland 2 0 2 4 . Ready 2 2 2 4. Ruckdaschtl I
J i 20, Klblar 10 0 2. Carwlse 20 2 4 , Walton 0 0 0 0 . Yoon 00 0 0 . Selkaus 000
0 Totals: 70S 12 44.
Saabrtait(44)
Laws 3 0 0 4. Brunton 3 2 4 1. Clara 0 0 0 0 . Saalat 41 2 * . Johnson 0 0 0 0 .
Sampson 0 0 0 0. Crowe 5 2 2 II. Rona 2117. Canldale 1 002. Oswald 0242.
Totals: I** 15 44
Lyman
12 I I 12 2 - 4 4
Saabraait
I* 12 I
4 — 44
Three point (laid goals — Lyman I (Ruckdeschel). Saabraait 1 (Crowa).
Taam louts — Lyman 13; Seabreeia 14. Fouled out — none Technicals —
none Records — Lyman I 4; Saabraaia 5 4.
S E M IN O LE 43, M A R TIN C O U N TY 41
Semlnolt (43)
T. Perkins 2 2 7 4. Roberts 3 2 2 I. Tralna 0 0 0 0. R Parkins 0 0 0 0. Parker
10 22 22. Fuller 0 00 0. Daniels 7 2 5 14. McCarrcll 3 5 10 11, Hall 0 00 0.
Holloway 0000 Totals: 35 I] 2443
Stuart-Martin County (41)
DaWIndt 3 2 2 4, Wltherow 3 5 7 17. Solomon 0 00 0. Hubbard 5 3 2 )4,
Hawkins 1 14 4. Hamilton 5 3 3 14. Phoebus 0 0 0 0. Wilbur 3 1-1 7. Totals: 31
15 20 41.
Seminole
13 33 12 14 - 43
Marlin Caunty
• 15 24 14 — 41

□Baa SCC. Page 3B________________________________

’Hounds extend streak at Lady Cat Tournament
From Staff Raporta
O C A LA — Sophomore shooting
guurd Kale Brown scored a careerhigh 23 points Monday evening lo
lead the Lyman Greyhounds lo a
65-44 win over Wildwood 111 the lirst
round of the Ocala-Forest Lady Cal
Basket hall Tournament.

B A S K ETB A LL
7.30 p.m. -

"W e're going to have lo he very patient and
composed. If not. they can give us some real trouble.
They have some people who are dangerous. We will
have lo he consistent on defense and seize our
opportunities on offense."
Lyman advanced lo the championship game with a
4-1 victory over Lake Brantley Monday night. Seabreeze
rallied for a 2-1 decision over Lake Mary lo earn Its
berth In tile finals.
In other games Monday. Tampa-Berklcy Prep de­
feated Deltona 3-1. Lake Howell ripped Tampa
Preparatory 6-1. Winter Park blanked Boone 7-0 and
Fori Umdrrdalc-St. Thomas Aquinas edged Bishop
Moore 2 -1.
Play at Don T . Reynolds Stadium begins al I p.tn.
this afternoon, when Lake Howell and Tnmpa-Hcrklcy
Prep play In the finals of (he first round losers' bracket.
Winter Park and SI. Thomas will meet 111 Ihc fifth-place
game at 4 p.111. before Lake Mary and Lake Brantley
tangle In (he (bird place game al 6 p.m.
On Monday night, Lyman used Danielle Garrett's hat
(rlek and a goal and two assists from Danya Harris to
knock ofTLake Brantley.
Harris's goal came on a penalty kick at 11:30 after
Garrett was taken down In the Lake Brantley penalty
area by a Patriot defender. Not only did (he foul lead In
the penally kick, because Garrett had a "clear scoring
opportunity" when she was fouled. Ihc defender
received a red card and was ejected.

Lyman, which has won eight
games In a row. plays Keystone
Heights today at 6 p.m. in the
semifinals. Keystone Heights was
ranked ninth in last week's Florida

£&gt;poris Writers Association Class 2A
state poll.
Brown also had eight rebounds,
seven steals and six assists for the
Greyhounds I I 1-1).
"It wus a good w in," said Lyman
roach Steve Carmichael. "W e feel
that Wildwood has a good hall club.
The game was much better played
than (he score Indicates. We had a
good, solid fourth quarter to turn
the game Into a blowout."
Lymun Jumped out lo u 14-5 lead
after one quarter, then stretched the
advantage to 32-21 bv halftime.

Leading 44-31 after three quarters.
Ih c G re y h o u n d s h a m m e re d
Wildwood 21 •12 in the final period.

girls urc looking forward to playing
them again."

Felicia Klep and Latishu Smith
also turned In solid efforts for the
Greyhounds. Klep contributing 13
points and 12 rebounds while Smith
had 14 points and 11 rebounds.

LY M A N &lt;411
Brown 10 2 4 23. Wood 1 0 0 2. Morris Webster 4
0 0 4. Frelwell 0 2 3 2. Klep 4 0 2 13. Smith 4 2 2 14.
Crager 112 3. W tst 0000. Porttr 0000. Dowling
0000. RhodetOOOO Totals 244 1545
W ILDW OOD (44)
Ruthcrlord 2 13 5. Johnson 3127. Brooks ) 0 0
2. Blackwell 4 0 3 4. Weaver 7 00 15. Brutton 3 I t
5. Hall 10 02 Totals 20 3 4 44
Lyman
14 14 13 21 - 45
Wildwood
5 14 10 1 1 - 4 4
Three point Held goals — Lyman I (Klep I).
Wildwood t (Weaver I) Total tools — Lyman 11,
Wildwood 17 Fouled out — None Technicals —
Nona Records— Wildwood 7 J. Lyman 1) 1.

Lym an's game with Keystone
Heights this evening Is a rematch or
last year's semifinal contest be­
tween the two teams.
"Th e y beat us last year by a
three." recalled Carmichael. "O ur

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STATS &amp; STANDINGS
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•Unfa. But
with 6 -foot. fMileh center Chris
Braxton leading the way. the
Lions held off the Silver Hawks.
Braxton led the way with 12
points, while point guard Devon
Green chipped In with 10. Rich
Davis and Bri^n Drayton were U

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Jim m y Newberry was the lone
bright spot for Lake Mary as he
in 11 of the Rams' 30
points,
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Middayriac. ti

PaKaWat law Praanaid. t p.m.

coach Bob
Trains, because he waa the head
man at Martin County last year.
Matt Parker had hla biggest
scoring night of his career,
pumping In 22 polnu. Jun io r
Been Daniels chipped In with 16
and McCarrell i 1.
Lym an was eliminated from

Vd
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fu rth e r com pel
to u rn a m e n t b y
48-46. despite a 1
points by T im R'ucl
TTus evening si
and University a
P-nt. and Bemlnc
Seabreexeat 7:30 j

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IM HIW it ot
to give the Orey hounds
iW t lu lfIfto
• 34) hstfume lend. Oerrett's
Garrett's
unassisted f o il al 77:17 of the
second had put Lytswn up 4«0.
L ik e Brantley, w hich kept
offensive pressure on Lym an
throughout the second half dcspite being dow n a player,
managed a final act of defiance,
Katie T u llla scoring an un&gt;
aaalated foal lust 10 seconds
um

I!? T u r n i ir i

beeiten
-U ncoln ana
81 Thomaa Aquinas - both
sute tournament qualifiers In
their'respective classification a
y e a r ago — to get to the
semifinals, the Sandcrabe fell
behind 14) before rallying for the
win.
After a scoreless first half,
Brooke Kent gave Lake Mary a;

y

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**!

because of the catty ejection," half.' Th e lead wan short-lived as
said Barnett. “ Lake Brantley put Samantha Baggett scared lor the
a lot of pressure on our foal. Sandcraba Just four m inutes
C h e r y l .{ R o b e r t s . L y m a n ' s later.
foalkeeper) bad to make some . Shannon Ryan came up with
tough save*. Through the entire the game-winner for Beabreese.
second h a lf. Labe
-ake B ra n tle y scoring in the i 1 st minute.
an*cvedtualty

note's other ttoal and
on one of iS S rS F
Shirley Pinto waa i

.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, December 22, 1902 - SB

People
IN

Th# Ovor-SO Club
ctlabratea Niton

B R I E F

Tha Over-50 club hold Its
annual Christmas parly at tha
Sanford Civic Canter. A ham
and turkey dlnenr with all tha
tri mml nos was sar.vad.
Honored guests wars Mayor
Battya Smith, Mika Kirby, Chris
Usry, Linds Tuckar and Craig
Hansen. Officers and spouses
attending were (from left);
Florenoe Wilton, treasurer;
J a c k K a m i n s k y , . M*r y
Kaminsky,- secretary; Jim
Qunstar, president; Marge
Qunster, Jean Brunsfll and Tad
Brunelll, vice president.

Toastmasters matt at 8CC
Seminole Com m unity College (S C O Toastmasters Club
*6981 w ill meet every Tuesday. 7:30 p.m .. at Seminole
Com m unity College. Contact Resells Bonham at 323-8284 for
more Information

Kiwanla Club of Caaaalbarry maata
Klwanla Club of Casselberry meets every Tuesday at 7:30 a.m .,
at Village Inn. com er Dog Track Road and U S Hlghway 17-02
InLongwood. For Information, call 831-8549.

Laka Mary Optlmlata moot woakty
The Optimist Club of Lake Mary meets every Tuesday at 7.-00
p.m .. at 100 E . Crystal Lake Ave. (com er of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors are welcome.

Taka off pounds ssnslbly
Members of Take Off Pounds Sensibly. TO PS, invite the
public to Join them on Tuesday evenings from 7 to 8 p.m . at
the First Christian Church. 1007 Sanford Ave.. Sanford.
Th e group now has a private room to weigh people between
6:15 and 6:45 p.m .
Each week a different program on weight loea w ill be
conducted.
For more Information about the club, call 323-7962 or
323-1664.

Panic Attack group to moot
Agoraphobia/Panlc Attack Support Q roup meets each
Tuesday at 8 p.m . at West Lake Hospital. 889 W . State Road
434. Longwood. Th e support group is for those who are afraid
to go out of their house and be active In public.

Ovsraatara to gather
A regular meeting of Overeaten Anonymous is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m . at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave., Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at 322-0687.

Nar-Anon to offarhatp
Nar-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, w ill meet Tuesday at 8 p.m . at Orlando General
Hospital. For more information, call 800-6384.

Al-Anon group gathers
Serenity W on. an Al-Anon group for friends and family of
alcoholic*, w ill meet each Monday. Tuesday and Thursday
night at 8 p.m . at the Sahara Club, 2887 8 . Sanford Ave..
Sanford. Call Flora at 349-8870for more Information.

Clogging olaeaaa formed
Th e Old Hickory Stem p e n offer free beginner rlogging
classes. Intermediate end advanced lessons also available.
Meetings are at the Deltona Civic Association on T u esdays
from 6 to 9 p.m . Call 349-9629for more Information.

Jayeoos moot In Sanford
Th e Sanford Jaycees meet the second and fourth T uesday of
each m onth. Anyone Interested In attending can call Brent
Adamson or David T . Ruaei J r . at 3224663.
**ft rv*l «v
• .*

1___

■■ ■ - !

M a n n o t a s h a m e d o f g rie f fo r sn a k e
ri I

had to write
when I read the letter about
David, the 9-year-old boy who
waa laughed at for crying when
irboy. his parakeet, died,
t would say, " It was only a
I’m a 24-year-old m an. Tw o
yean ago I moved to California,
In m y frilly packed car I brought
m y mother and Poobo — m y
4-foot boa constrictor. I had
Poobo for 314 years.
A month after I arrived In San
F ra nc is co , I m oved In to a
warehouse In Oakland. It waa
great, except it was very cold
inside,' and boa constrictors need
at least 79-degree temperatures.
Unfortunately, I couldn’t come
up w ith a w ay to keep Poobo
warm until It waa too late, and
he died of pneumonia.
I found him dead during m y
lunch break from work. I cried
so hard. I couldn't return to
work that day. W hen I went
back to m y Job 1 was depressed
and teary-eyed and people would
say. " It was only a snake: bow
can you ary over a snake?"
Abby, I bad had Poobo since
be was a baby. I watched him
grow. I could tell when he waa
hungry o r In a bad mood. If I left
hlm n for too long he would
"p o ut" and reftise to come near
me. He had feelings Just Uke any
other p e t T o this day, I Art a
lum p In m y throat when I think
of him . I’ve had snakes as pets

very well-trained. She put me at cussed this every time, and she
ease, explained the procedure, insists she Is right and that there
answered aU m y questions and Is no necessity to sa id him a
made me feel very comfortable. separate Invitation. W hat do you
A "disgusting" Job? HaitUyt
think?
Abby, there w ill always be
people who can't find anything
positive to aay about anything.
Please pass along m y heartfelt
th a n ks to those dedicated, I agree with you and your friend.
hardworking te
A nd if your daughter persists In
KA
"a d d in g " his name to yo u r
Invitation,, knowing that be w ill
I'm printing not accept the invitation, it la
yo ur letter. A ll mammogram a b u n d a n t ly cle a r th a t she
technlcana deserve the boost.
doesn't m uch care what her
m o th e r's g e n tle m a n frie n d
On Nov.
30, the address for the American
HaHai Health Organisation (for
sexually transmitted diseases)
w as In c o rre c t. T h e co rre ct
address Is: The American Social
4
&lt;re. v»
Health Association (ASH A), P.O.
m rm m m fm JB m
Box 13827-H, Research Triangle
Park. N .C. 27709. Please Include
a self-addressed, stamped (82
cents) envelope.

r«

hard on me.
So, David, c
over Prcttyboy,
through, and ti
thise w ith you.
c r y , 29-year-c
99-year-olds cry
a beloved pet.
Abby,please i
column for David

TANNING

naturally, and are healing.

C O N F ID E N TIA L T O EDW ARD
J A Y P H I L L I P S IN M I N ­
N E A P O L IS : H appy B lrthd gy,
son. Love—

DBA ft A B B T t Th ta la for
"X -R a y ‘Tech’” who wrote to
aay that num erous w om en.

1 YR. UNLIMITED

SSJsrffi k

n k

MR

nmogram. When pa rty o r Im portant occasion
tithe door at Sky cornea up, m y daughter sends
aphy Center In roe an invitation and adda m y
the reception let M end's name to I t I fed that
me for taking since we do not Uve together and
d f.
he has a separate address, be
room, your col- should have the courtesy at his
1 on the bulletin own Invitation. M y friend is very
"Th e temporary adamant about this, and w ill not
nam m ogram iea accept an invitation unless he
small price to pay
pay for possibly receives his own. (I agree with
•
aavlngyourlife ™
^
* him .)
Th a technician was obviously

spate

Th e following births have been
recorded at H C A Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford:
Nov. 29 - Virginia Barfield.
Sanford, girl; Melissa and Donald
Coppola. Geneva, girl.
Dec. 2 — KaUUeeen Em ey,
Sanford, boy.
Dec. 8 — Patrice Jackson and
Kenneth Davis. Lake Monroe,
boy,
Dec. 9 — Paullnda and Michael
Edwards, Sanford, boy: Clara
and G ary W eichlln. Oeneva. girt.
Dec. 10 — Deanna and Bob
H ariy, Sanford, boy.
Dec. 11 — Lisa Sim m ons,
Oeneva. boy.

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.aaartife
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DAILY WORK. OAILV PAVI
Rapart aUAMlMfcfc. Pranch

✓ Newly remodeled apta.
✓ One and two bedroom
✓ Ask about pur 1
bedroom Specials
✓ 7 or 12 m onth leases
✓ Close to nutfor hwys.
and thoroughfares

waahWyar.
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2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

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�Santoro Hsrsld, 8anford, Florida - Tutaday, Decambar 22, 1902

A n t i b i o t ic s h e lp
a s th m a s u ffe re rs

MULTIPLE-CHOICE
QUESTIONS WOKK
EVERV TIME

TAKE ME TO VINNER
OIVE ME A Eld KlBSfl
MARRY ME

HON ABOUT IF ME SINO
*06CK THE H N J£," THEM?

HEY, MARCIE.. Y EOT
ANY EXTRA CHRISTMAS
CARDS? I F0R6OTTO
BUY SOME.. ____

AND HOW ABOUT
STAMPS? I'LL NEED
SOME STAMPS, TOO

HERE, KEEP THIS
ONE..THEN I
WON'T HAVE TO
SEND IT TO YOU...

M O M Q U E K S £ ft IU G A R N G

THESE ttWOUEW SWEATERS ,
WHIM WE GO OUT
J

f t MUST
BEV/tRV
AMOOBUG

ITS E O O O TD S a Y 'TlS TH E
YOU FILL6P WITH / SEASON
THE HOLIDAY
TO BE
.SPIRIT, SIR.. X SARCASTIC

r r t tejo ural
HARASM EUT
ISIUOTITIS

D EAR DR. Q O T T ; For the
past five years I’ve suffered from
seVere bronchial asthma and
emphysema. I use Prevent!! In
m y breathing machine and also
have an oxygen machine at
home. Cephalexin and doxycycllne upset m y stomach, and
" ‘ "like
ilnion on the best
I'd
antibiotic to take.
D EAR R EAD ER : Asthma Is
often complicated (and may even
be triggered by) low-grade bronchlal Infection. Th us, antibiotics
frequently relieve the breathing
difficulty caused by asthma. O f
course, other drugs are used.
too. such as Proventtl and predntsone.
If you experience stomach
distress from the antibiotics
cephslexln and doxycycllne.
your doctor m ight want to try
am plclllln. amoxicillin or plain
penicillin.
Because allergies m ay also
contribute to asthma. I am
sending you a free copy of m y
newest H ealth Report
"Allergies." Other readers who
would like a copy should send
$1. 25 p lu s a lo n g , s e lfaddressed. stamped envelope to
P.O. Box 91389. Cleveland. OH
44101-3369. Be sure to mention
the title.
D EAR DR. Q O T T : T o comment .on the Individual with
annoylng athlete's foot, the folk
remedy of a green, unhulled
black walnut really works. Sim ­
ply cut the casing open, expos­
ing the Juice. A p ply to the
affected area generously.
D EAR R EAD ER : Orest. Now
please tell me where the average
city dweller Is going to find
green, unhulled black walnuts.
C'm on. give me a break. W hat
good Is a remedy If the lngredlents are difficult to obtain?
I appreciate your taking the
time to write but, I'm afraid.
your suggestion Isn't going to
help the m ajority of m y readers.
especially those who don't have
black walnut trees growing In
their yards.

Although folk remedies are
often useful In treating common
ailments, t believe they m ust be
easy to procure and inexpensive
to purchase. Therefore, the more
t r a d i t i o n a l t r e a t m e n t fo r
athlete's foot (such as Tlnactln

r

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play?
East opened with a classic
weak two-bid In hearts. South's
sequence, a take-out double
followed by three spades,
showed a hand too strong.to
overcall w ith two or three
spades. Even so. he was cautious
In not Jum ping to four spades.
West led the heart Jack: two.
ace. three. Knowing his partner
had led a singleton. East re-

D M .l t . I M S

f AUTOS 1

MMT* jn t snot* race on
io V

THW o n e )

it pceewoe on
WHO THe

rn cK ceK .

In the year ahead you might
be endowed with more drive and
tenacity than you previously
experienced. In situations where
you were once content to be a
follower you will now strive to be
a leader.
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Ventures or endeavors you
undertake now could have pro­
mising. long range effects. Plan
tomorrow with great care. What
yo u envisio n Is reachable.
Capricorn, treat yourself to a
b i r t h d a y gift. S e n d for
Capricorn's Astro-Graph predic­
tions for the year ahead by
mailing 91.25 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101*3428. Be sure to state
your sod lac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
New life can now inspire an
.enterprise that looked like a lost
cause. You believed In it pre­
viously and soop you m ay
believe in it again.
PtSCSS (Feb. 20-March 20)
Contacts you make now can do a

ANNII
W M f lg t N W

k

»

r "
i

n e e d s . H e w i n s w i t h th e
diamond ace. draws two rounds
of trum ps, unblocks the K -Q of
diamonds, crosses to dum m y
with a spade and discards a loser
on the diamond Jack.
Always play the card you are
known to hold. It keeps the
unknown card(s) unknown.

great deal to advance yo ur
personal Interests. It looks like
you'll become involved w ith a
new crowd who are doers rather
than dullards.
A I M (March 21-AprU 19)
You've entered Into a promising
cycle that w ill last for the next
few weeks: you can advance
your status In life If you apply
yourself. Bet realistic objectives
and pursue them.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Beginning today, experiences
you gain could help broaden
your outlook and perspective. A
happier and wiser you m ay
result from your new slant on
life.
O E M IN I (M ay 21-June 20)
You might be invited to Join an
endeavor at this time with
someone y o u . know and trust.
Th e foundation already has been
established, but you can still
make effective contributions.
CARCSR (June 21-July 22)
Partnerships which you enter In
this cycle could be beneficial for
both you and your allies. There
is strength, as well as opportuni­
ty. In these unions.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. $3) There
are indications you m ight be

given a larger range of responsi­
bility where your work or career
is concerned. Perform to the best
of your ability, because rewards
w ill be proportionate.
VISO O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Happy changes could now be
available to you regarding your
social life and popularity. Pres­
ent relationships m ay also
become more meaningful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In ­
fluences that affect your home
and family life could undergo
constructive changes In this
time frame. Harm ony will re­
place discord.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Listen carefully to Ideas or
proposals brought to you by
others, because they might pro­
vide you with constructive ele­
ments thst you can Incorporate
Into your Immediate plans.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1 ) Y o u r chart indicates a
marked Improvement in your
fin a n c ia l tre n d s . Be alert,
because profitable new channels
or situations m ight open up for
you over the com ing weeks..
(0 1 9 9 2 . NEW SPAPER BN-

�INFORMATION

SERVICES

•n accurate and complete reproductions of the records of

at delivered in the regular course of business for microfilming to Dataplex
It it further ctrtifitd tht tntirt microphotogrtphic procttttt uttd in produc
v* *&gt;v

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film wort carritd out in

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raquiramantt of tha Amarican National 8tandardt Inatitute and tha Inttrnai
Ravanua Service for parmanant/archival microphotogrtphic copy.

�( Q U A LITY CONTROL DENSITY T A R G E T J
j ^ A P L E X ' P.O. BOX 14975, JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI 39236 (601) 977-4000
CUSTOMER N U B

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MACHINE OPERATOR

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standard* *et forth by the American National Standard* Institute, National Micrographic* Association, and National Bureau of Standard* be met
When determining background density r*qulrem*nt», referto NMA MS 23.1983, Section* 4.1.4 and 4.2.4.
______ ______ ______
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, December 22, 1992; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
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